Monday, December 24, 2007
Stepped up DUI crackdown over holidays
DUI attorneys of San Diego story
WASHINGTON — As millions of Americans hit the roads for the holiday season, Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) and the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) stand united in support of the Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA) nationwide crackdown, Drunk Driving. Over the Limit. Under Arrest.
Comprised of stepped-up, high-visibility law enforcement including saturation patrols and sobriety checkpoints, a multi-million ad campaign aims to increase awareness and ultimately deter drunk driving. Between the Thanksgiving and New Year’s holidays, travelers share the roads with more than 2.8 million drunk drivers with three or more convictions and of those, more than half a million have five or more convictions.
With state highway safety agencies and law enforcement officers from around the country ramping up efforts to stop drunk driving, the nation’s capital set the stage to announce details of increased law enforcement efforts and a $7 million national TV and radio ad campaign. New data released recently from NHTSA showed that while an average of 36 fatalities occur daily involving drivers impaired by alcohol throughout the year, the daily average jumps to 45 per day surrounding the Christmas holiday and even higher to 54 per day over the New Year’s holiday.
“With the help of law enforcement, MADD is looking forward to the day when we can eliminate this deadly crime once and for all,” said MADD’s National President Glynn Birch, whose 21-month-old son, Courtney, was killed by a repeat drunk driving offender nearly 20 years ago. The Campaign to Eliminate Drunk Driving calls for increased law enforcement, such as sobriety checkpoints, mandating alcohol ignition interlocks for all convicted drunk drivers, exploration and development of advanced technologies to prevent a vehicle from being driven by someone who is drunk, and mobilization of grassroots support for the Campaign. “By displaying a MADD red ribbon in support of enforcement and the Campaign, the public can take action that does remind other motorists to never drive drunk.”
GHSA Chairman Christopher J. Murphy noted that states across the country are increasing their efforts to stop the tragic epidemic of drunk driving. “Drunk Driving. Over the Limit. Under Arrest. isn’t just a slogan, but is a reflection of states’ increasing intolerance of drunk driving. The time for excuses and exceptions has long passed,” Murphy said. “States are funding overtime enforcement, drunk driving checkpoints and saturation patrols to keep the roads safe during the holidays.”
A detailed listing of state activities is available at www.ghsa.org.
“We know that sobriety checkpoints and other law enforcement efforts help reduce impaired driving and the needless deaths and injuries that go hand in hand with it,” IACP President Ronald Ruecker, director of public safety, Sherwood, Ore., said. “Law enforcement officers will be out in full force this holiday season to crack down on impaired drivers, getting them off our nation’s roads and behind bars.”
DUI lawyers of San Diego brought this update.
WASHINGTON — As millions of Americans hit the roads for the holiday season, Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), the Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) and the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) stand united in support of the Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA) nationwide crackdown, Drunk Driving. Over the Limit. Under Arrest.
Comprised of stepped-up, high-visibility law enforcement including saturation patrols and sobriety checkpoints, a multi-million ad campaign aims to increase awareness and ultimately deter drunk driving. Between the Thanksgiving and New Year’s holidays, travelers share the roads with more than 2.8 million drunk drivers with three or more convictions and of those, more than half a million have five or more convictions.
With state highway safety agencies and law enforcement officers from around the country ramping up efforts to stop drunk driving, the nation’s capital set the stage to announce details of increased law enforcement efforts and a $7 million national TV and radio ad campaign. New data released recently from NHTSA showed that while an average of 36 fatalities occur daily involving drivers impaired by alcohol throughout the year, the daily average jumps to 45 per day surrounding the Christmas holiday and even higher to 54 per day over the New Year’s holiday.
“With the help of law enforcement, MADD is looking forward to the day when we can eliminate this deadly crime once and for all,” said MADD’s National President Glynn Birch, whose 21-month-old son, Courtney, was killed by a repeat drunk driving offender nearly 20 years ago. The Campaign to Eliminate Drunk Driving calls for increased law enforcement, such as sobriety checkpoints, mandating alcohol ignition interlocks for all convicted drunk drivers, exploration and development of advanced technologies to prevent a vehicle from being driven by someone who is drunk, and mobilization of grassroots support for the Campaign. “By displaying a MADD red ribbon in support of enforcement and the Campaign, the public can take action that does remind other motorists to never drive drunk.”
GHSA Chairman Christopher J. Murphy noted that states across the country are increasing their efforts to stop the tragic epidemic of drunk driving. “Drunk Driving. Over the Limit. Under Arrest. isn’t just a slogan, but is a reflection of states’ increasing intolerance of drunk driving. The time for excuses and exceptions has long passed,” Murphy said. “States are funding overtime enforcement, drunk driving checkpoints and saturation patrols to keep the roads safe during the holidays.”
A detailed listing of state activities is available at www.ghsa.org.
“We know that sobriety checkpoints and other law enforcement efforts help reduce impaired driving and the needless deaths and injuries that go hand in hand with it,” IACP President Ronald Ruecker, director of public safety, Sherwood, Ore., said. “Law enforcement officers will be out in full force this holiday season to crack down on impaired drivers, getting them off our nation’s roads and behind bars.”
DUI lawyers of San Diego brought this update.
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