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What you should worry about.


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#1 Rogerdodger

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Posted 20 February 2008 - 11:26 AM

We worry about stuff that might kill you.
Here's what will...drunk driving.
An average of one death every half-hour!


The President's day holiday. 12 years ago.
My older brother was finally taking his health seriously.
He quit smoking, lost weight and began dancing for exercise (and to meet the ladies).
He was at a good place in his life and was looking forward to a great retirement in a few more years after a career with the Oklahoma Department of Human Services.

A life-long drunk driver had other plans for him.
The drunk had been arrested many times and had his license revoked..
It seems that so often, little is done considering the peril they put the rest of us in.

So I was glad to see this news today:

LINK
Man gets 8 years for 19 DUIs
Judge lectures driver; suspends license forever

BY JANICE MORSE | JMORSE@ENQUIRER.COM

HAMILTON - A Hamilton man's 19th drunken driving conviction earned him eight years in prison and a lecture about his 30-year record, which ranks him among Ohio's six worst drunken drivers.

"You knew a long time ago that you had a problem with drinking and driving and you've never chosen to do anything," Judge Noah Powers told Stephen W. Wolf in Butler County Common Pleas Court during sentencing Tuesday.
Wolf faced up to 10 years in prison as a result of a hit-and-run crash in Fairfield Township last summer.
He's among four Ohio drivers with 19 drunken-driving convictions; two others are tied for the state record of 20 convictions.
Powers also imposed a lifetime driving suspension. But Wolf has disregarded suspensions since at least 1984.
Now 51, Wolf was first convicted of drunken driving in 1978, just before his 22nd birthday. Ohio law then allowed little jail time for repeat drunken drivers. Laws have toughened since.

Butler County Prosecutor Robin Piper said Wolf's eight-year prison term is proof: "This guy is the example that shows everyone that drinking too much and getting in a car can land you in prison for eight years. That ought to be long enough to sober you up."
Piper said he understands alcoholism is a disease. But, he said: "No disease makes you get in a car and drive. If you want to get plastered, stay home and get plastered on the front porch instead of climbing into a car and risking the lives of innocent people. Stay at home with your 12-pack."
Enquirer readers e-mailed to express outrage about Wolf's driving record and about his lawyer, Robert Qucsai, urging leniency.
Lindy Ranz, of Harrison, wrote: "Would Mr. Qucsai let any of his family members ride in a car driven by Wolf? I certainly would not. We are all lucky that this 'drunk' did not kill anyone."
"Lock him up FOREVER," wrote Jimmy Combs of Newport. "Nobody deserves 19 chances to kill someone while driving drunk."
Qucsai called his client "a broken man" who suffers from multiple sclerosis, leukemia and alcohol abuse - and needs help.
Wolf apologized for his actions.
But Powers noted that Wolf at first denied driving during the Fairfield Township incident.



However, when the guy gets out he will be about the age of the old drunk who killed my brother.
And a lack of license means nothing.

Here's what was left of my brother's car.

Posted Image


MADD Statistics LINK
In 2006, 17,602 people were killed in alcohol-related crashes - an average of one every half-hour. These deaths constituted approximately 41 percent of the 42,642 total traffic fatalities.

Edited by Rogerdodger, 20 February 2008 - 11:31 AM.


#2 OEXCHAOS

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Posted 20 February 2008 - 01:47 PM

That's horrible. Our legal system is shameful the way it has turned DUI into a revenue scheme rather than the public safety issue that it is. Lowering blood alcohol levels doesn't decrease accidents. In fact most of the nastiest drunk driving accidents are committed by multiple offenders. What they need to do is quit with the mindless neo-prohibition nonsense and get serious about first major intervention in reoffenders lives, and then incarceration. At some point, it's imperative to remember that multiple offenders will drive without a license and are doomed to re-offend. Mark

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#3 Rogerdodger

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Posted 24 February 2008 - 01:29 PM

Even if you don't get hurt or hurt someone else, a DUI conviction can really mess you up: DUI Story: A very good friend of ours has had a series of very unfortunate events. After building their own, paid in full home, from the ground up, her husband died of cancer. She remarried and the guy took her for every dime she had and she lost the refinanced home thru foreclosure and bankruptcy. Her daughter-in-law was diagnosed with MS and was put in a nursing home. One of her beautiful 17 year old twin grandaughters went blind temporarily and was diagnosed with early MS. Our friend began "self-medicating" with wine. She was arrested for DUI which will cost her several thousands of dollars in fines. Most of her family has totally shunned her. With the help of friends, she was able to get a small apartment where she could walk to work. At her new job, they loved her and she was their #1 leasing agents. Then they did a background check and was fired for the DUI. At 60, she's broke, jobless, and nearly homeless. The DUI has been the last straw.

#4 Rogerdodger

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Posted 24 February 2008 - 01:32 PM

LINK
DUI agency head suspended after DUI arrest.
Martin County, Florida

By George Andreassi
Wednesday, February 20, 2008

PALM CITY — The leader of a Treasure Coast-wide agency established to provide classes for people convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs was suspended from her job Wednesday in the wake of her DUI arrest Monday.

Her blood alcohol level was measured in a breath test at 0.336.
The legal driving limit in Florida is 0.08 percent.