| Aug 25 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategoryFatal DUI accidents are worst in Texas; lawmakers ponder responseTexas lawmakers know they must act, but how is the big question. Our state leads the nation in alcohol-related traffic deaths, and Dallas County is the nation’s third-worst for per capita drunk driving fatalities. Such tragic distinctions cannot continue. One huge problem is that many drunk driving fatalities are caused by multiple offenders — people who already have been arrested as a drunk driver, but keep driving drunk anyway. While repeat offenders represent only 20 per cent of those arrested for drunk driving, they are a very dangerous one-fifth. How can they be rehabilitated — or kept from driving? A recent Dallas Morning News report said Texas lawmakers can continue passing stricter laws to keep drunk drivers off streets, but that such laws haven’t worked well to date. Another option is to lessen financial penalties to drunk drivers, which would lead to fewer offenders opting for prison, rather than probation which includes substance abuse treatment. One state senator wants a law which automatically and permanently revokes the license of anyone convicted of a second DUI offense. Sound extreme? Ask the suffering survivors of the 1,269 innocent Texans who were killed by drunk drivers in 2008 and since then, or the many thousands who suffered catastrophic injuries due to DUI car crash accidents. Critics say this would only lead to more and more drunk drivers operating a vehicle without a license. For now, drunk drivers’ licenses are suspended for various amounts of time before being reinstated. Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) has other proposals, including adding more sobriety checkpoints and requiring ignition interlock devices to be installed in the vehicles of those who have driven drunk. Such devices analyze a person’s breath to determine if they are drunk and disable the car if that is the case. We can’t know which measures Texas legislators will adopt, but one thing is clear: They must act. Otherwise they are tolerating the intolerable, and Texas’ grisly distinction as the America’s drunk driving capital will continue. Jim S. Adler & Associates strongly supports MADD and other campaigns to fight drunk driving car accidents. |
| Aug 11 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategoryHarris County is nation’s worst for drunk driving car accident fatalities
This sobering threat to public safety is why local law enforcement agencies are gearing up to bring down the number of drunk drivers. They’re doing this via a multi-agency crackdown. Through Labor Day weekend, law officers will be working overtime to spot drunk drivers and get them off our roads, streets and highways. Another part of the campaign is Choose Your Ride. This program emphasizes that those who drink should do anything but drive a vehicle. Instead, they are urged to take a cab or a bus, or ride with a sober friend or designated driver. Otherwise, they may wind up riding with a police officer — to jail. |
| May 27 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategoryDPS to tackle Texas Memorial Day weekend car accident causes
Last year, DPS officers issued more than 8,500 speeding tickets on Memorial Day weekend. They also wrote out 1,937 tickets for failing to wear seat belts and 521 for failing to provide proper child restraints. They also arrested 622 people for drunk driving. Those kinds of violations again will be targeted for this long weekend, the DPS promises. |
| May 03 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategoryTexas drunk driving car crash injuries, fatalities are relentless
What do all these tragedies over the weekend have in common? They all involve suspected drunk drivers who lost control of their vehicle. But when the DUI suspect truly lost control was upon making a conscious decision to drink and then drive. |
| Apr 06 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategoryAre drunk drivers as bad as terrorists? No — worse
The answer to each question is simple: Drunk drivers are slaughtering us. They’ve been doing so virtually since autos were born, and though death numbers have risen and fallen, they’ve never disappeared. Put simply: Drunks kill — and isn’t that reason enough to do something about it? Yet for many, news of another drunk driving fatality seems routine and, unless a loved one was killed, acceptable. Drunk drivers seem to be just a fact of life. But not all facts are unalterable. |
| Mar 29 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategoryGot a second? You could cut Houston car crash deaths
You could be doing everything right — wearing your seat belt, signaling when you change lines, obeying the speed limit, setting aside your cell phone — and still have a fatal car accident. That’s because it only takes a moment’s inattention or a single mistake –by you or another driver — to cause a car wreck or traffic tragedy. |
| Feb 10 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategoryTexas, California cities are tops in drunks, spurring more drunk driving accidents
The magazine’s survey included a city’s alcohol-related car crashes, its number of drunk driving arrests and the severity of its drunk driving penalties. It also based conclusions on death rates from alcoholic liver disease and the frequency of binge drinking. |
| Dec 29 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategoryDon’t crash New Year’s Eve parties with a drunk driving car accident
It’s always the same story, so you’d think Americans would wake up and learn a vital lesson: Don’t drink and drive. Yet such deaths spike during year-end holidays, and thousands of Americans (nearly 14,000 in 2008) become yearly statistics in drunk driving fatalities. |
| Dec 23 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategorySweet! Montgomery County tweets drunk drivers’ names in shame game which could work
As Chief Prosecutor Warren Diepraam told KPRC News, “We’ve kind of simplified it by using Twitter, putting that information that’s already out there as a public record . . . on Twitter so that people could follow who’s been arrested.” The idea is to discourage persons from drunk driving via the threat of public humiliation — on top of arrest and possible prosecution. Ligon believes such a tactic could “embarrass the right offender” with the threat of “collateral damages” (public shame) beyond the legal case itself. |
| Sep 14 |
Archive for the 'DWI' CategoryIgnition interlock devices are a tool in America’s war on drunk driving car accidents
According to Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), most states have laws requiring such devices, which involve detecting alcohol via a driver’s breath and not allowing a car to start if the test fails. In Arizona, Illinois, Louisiana and eight other states, the devices are required after an .08 reading for a DUI conviction. In Florida, North Carolina and six other states, they’re required after a .15 reading for a DUI conviction. In Texas, Missouri and four other states, they’re required after a repeat DUI conviction. In California, it’s up to a judge’s discretion, but the state’s lawmakers just passed a bill which would launch a four-county pilot program for using such devices, including Los Angeles County. |

According to Houston’s
The long Memorial Day weekend ahead is sure to bring car accident misery to Texas roads. But it’s also sure to bring more enforcement of our roadway laws. That’s because Texas Department of Public Safety officers will be out in force. While you play, they will work.
In Houston, a baby is on life support in a hospital because a car crashed into her family’s home. In San Antonio, a woman is hospitalized with serious injuries after a car crashed into her while she drove to church. In Dallas, four people are in a hospital after a three-car accident on North Central Expressway.
Why should we get mad about drunk drivers, like Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD)? Why should we have zero tolerance toward drunk drivers, pushing for more and stronger laws? Why are drunk driving car wreck accidents like a war against America? And why should anything change?
The
Drunk driving accounts for a whopping one third of all U.S. traffic fatalities, or about 12,000 Americans killed in the past year. But drunk driving isn’t the same throughout America. Some cities have worse problems than others with alcohol, as surveyed by
Americans love their holiday traditions, including New Year’s Eve. In Japan, the new year isn’t widely acknowledged until people rise the next morning. But in the USA, millions of revelers party past midnight to ring in another year. The only trouble is, such partying often includes heavy drinking and unleashes drunk drivers on our roads.
As we brace for the
Drunk drivers’ undeclared war on America has raged for decades, killing more than half a million U.S. citizens since 1982. Such a terrible toll mandates strong counterattacks, and one is requiring ignition-interlock devices in the vehicles of those who are known to be drunk drivers.