Saturday, March 13, 2010

DWI patrols beefed up by police for St. Patrick's Day in Jefferson County

Police beef up DWI patrols for St. Patrick's Day in Jefferson County

St. Louis, MO
Jefferson County Sheriffs Department today unveiled four new Chevy Tahoes, specifically modified for DWI enforcement. Using grant money from the Missouri Department of Transportation, the Jefferson County Sheriffs Department will now be able to patrol and process drivers pull over for suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol on site. In the past, it could take up to an hour before they could get a persons blood alcohol content.

Now, they hope cut that time dramatically, along with the 32 accidents attribute to alcohol last year.

The push for enforcement this year, is part of an overall operation that will involve heavy saturation in high priority areas and get the message out…Don't Drink and Drive.
DWI Lawyer - Jefferson County, MO

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Friday, March 12, 2010

Jefferson County DWI crackdown has begun to snare drunk drivers through St. Patrick's Day

Increased police patrols underway to snare drunk drivers

Hillsboro, MO
St. Patrick’s Day isn’t until Wednesday, but the state’s annual crackdown on drunk drivers is underway and this year’s effort includes a unit of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office devoted only to getting those motorists off the roads.

Some of the Jefferson County vehicles that are part of DWI enforcement.

The statewide effort, which started Friday and runs through Sunday, is one of five geared around holidays associated with heavy drinking, officials announced at a press conference Friday in Arnold. The Jefferson County unit, which is comprised of three deputies and four Chevy Tahoes, was formed to combat the county’s serious problem with drivers who are under the influence of drugs and alcohol. It is funded by a $399,223 grant from the Missouri Department of Transportation Highway Safety Division.

For the past two years, Jefferson County has topped the state in alcohol-related crashes, including crashes that end in death or with a serious injury, said Lt. Col. Steve Meinberg of the sheriff’s office. Last year, 32 people died in traffic crashes in the county – 14 were alcohol-related.

Jefferson County became the eighth such unit in the state. The unit has made 125 arrests since it formed in October, Meinberg said. The unit runs seven days a week and officers only work on getting drunk or high drivers off the streets. They do not respond to other calls for police service, he said.

Authorities warned of a higher-than-usual police presence on the roads this weekend and urged people who had too much to drink to not get behind the wheel.

“We’re going to be all over the place,” said Sgt. Al Nothum of the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

St. Louis County police planned to do sobriety checkpoints on Friday and today, and St. Louis police said they would do checkpoints today. Illinois State Police will have extra troopers on the roads this weekend as well as next weekend, said Trooper Mike Link. Police also said they plan to search for drunk drivers on St. Patrick’s Day.

Last year’s increased patrols on the weekend before St. Patrick’s Day in Missouri resulted in 467 drunken-driving tickets being issued, as well as 1,752 speeding tickets, 518 for not wearing a seat belt and 30 for children who were not properly restrained.

Jefferson County, MO DWI Lawyer - PulledOver.com

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Statewide DWI enforcement in Missouri for St. Patrick's Day weekend

Statewide DWI enforcement for St. Patrick's Day in Missouri

Jefferson City, MO
In advance of the St. Patrick's Day holiday, a statewide DWI enforcement is planned this weekend.

The Boone County Sheriff's Department and Jefferson City Police Departments are just two of the agencies participating in the "You Drink & Drive. You Lose" campaign.

A MoDOT grant will pay for officers to work extra shifts.

Anyone caught driving while intoxicated, could face fines and jail time.

Repeat offenders face fines up to five thousand dollars and possible prison time.
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Sunday, January 24, 2010

Boone County sobriety checkpoint nets 4 DWI arrests

Columbia, MO
A sobriety checkpoint conducted by the Boone County Sheriff’s Department produced 10 arrests out of the 50 vehicles checked, Sgt. Brian Leer said yesterday in a news release.

Deputies conducted the checkpoint from about 1 to 2 a.m. yesterday at the intersection of Brown School Road and Providence Road.

The arrests included the following: four people on suspicion of driving while intoxicated; two people on suspicion of driving with suspended or revoked driver’s licenses; one person on suspicion of possession of 35 grams or less of marijuana; one person on suspicion of possession of drug paraphernalia; one person on suspicion of a liquor law violation; and one person on suspicion of outstanding warrants.

A citation also was issued for a stop-sign violation, Leer said, and the department gave 22 verbal warnings.

The checkpoint was funded through a grant from the Missouri Department of Transportation’s Division of Highway Safety
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Monday, November 2, 2009

DWI refusal to blow - prosecutor's deals


St. Louis, MO
Refuse a breath test in Missouri and lose your license for a year.

It's one of the toughest DWI sanctions in state law. And one of the most ignored.

A Post-Dispatch investigation found that since 2000, area prosecutors have let more than 10,000 drivers keep their licenses despite refusing to take breath tests.

Drivers such as William Downs.


With bloodshot eyes, slurred speech and a string of profanities, he told deputies two years ago that there was "no (expletive) way" he would take a breath test.

Downs admitted to driving drunk. But St. Charles County prosecutors let him keep driving.
RELATED
bullet The law says one thing. Prosecutors say another.
bullet Prosecutors let uncooperative DWI arrestees keep driving
bullet Read more in a DWI special report


Within weeks of the DWI plea deal, a weaving Downs — high on cocaine and marijuana, according to police — slammed into a pickup in mid-Missouri. The crash killed a noted University of Missouri professor of agricultural engineering, Charles Fulhage.

Fulhage's widow, Jane, can't believe prosecutors let Downs legally drive after the deal.

But it happens all the time in St. Louis-area courts. When drivers refuse to take the breath test, the law allows them to appeal the one-year suspensions in civil court. The process is supposed to be separate from any criminal DWI case that comes from the traffic stop.

But most area prosecutors bargain away the suspensions as part of plea deals in the criminal DWI cases. The end result: Defendants admit to driving drunk and don't miss one day of driving.

"It just doesn't make sense," Jane Fulhage said through tears.

REFUSING THE TEST

State data show that a third of people arrested annually for DWI refuse to take an alcohol test.

Authorities could get search warrants to draw blood, but most area prosecutors say that is too cumbersome for all but the most serious cases. So Missouri, like most states, uses another tactic: scaring drivers into thinking they'll lose their licenses for much longer if they don't cooperate.

Under Missouri law, those who cooperate and test above the limit automatically lose their licenses for 90 days. Those who refuse to be tested are supposed to lose their licenses for a year or more.

The suspensions are supposed to occur regardless of any additional punishment a judge may later impose for a DWI conviction.

But tucked into the law is an appeal provision — one that for years has benefited those who refuse the test.

Drivers who take a test and fail can appeal the result to the state Department of Revenue. These administrative hearings are hard to win, so the 90-day suspension usually takes effect.

Drivers who refuse to take the test can appeal directly to civil court, where a judge automatically allows the person to continue driving until the appeal is heard.

When the Department of Revenue sends its own lawyers to civil court to fight appeals, the state wins 90 percent of the cases, and judges reinstate the one-year suspensions.

The state, though, lacks the lawyers to handle most of the 5,000 or so appeals filed in civil court every year across Missouri. So county prosecutors must represent the state.

And that's when DWI arrestees' odds dramatically improve.

Often, if defendants plead guilty to the criminal cases, pay fines and promise to do basic penance, such as community service, prosecutors will let them win the appeals and keep driving.

In essence, prosecutors give up on the appeals, telling a judge that their client, the Department of Revenue, should lose the cases. Judges then order the Department of Revenue to let the defendants keep their licenses.

The practice — called prosecutor "confession" — has become ingrained in the playbooks of many St. Louis-area prosecutors.

The most recent data for metro St. Louis — from July 1, 2008, through June 30, 2009 — show 1,395 suspected drunken drivers were allowed to stay on the road despite refusing to let police test their blood-alcohol levels.

PRACTICE DEFENDED

Area prosecutors say the practice of giving up on suspension appeals has been used for decades to help prosecutors get guilty pleas in cases tough to win without test results proving the drivers were drunk.

Defendants get special plea deals that may require them to do community service and get alcohol addiction screening. They keep DWI convictions off their records and get to continue driving, which helps them keep jobs, pay the bills and stay clean — a key benefit to society, prosecutors say.

Prosecutors in two counties — Franklin and Lincoln — aren't as likely to bargain with people who refuse breath tests. They say it's their job to try to impose the law's one-year suspension. Another prosecutor's office, in St. Louis city, stopped giving up appeals in September after the Post-Dispatch began questioning the practice.

"We had done this for so long, and we've done this because we wanted to be similar" to other area prosecutors' policies, assistant prosecutor Pippa Barrett said. "We changed our mind. We think actually that there's some value to not (giving up) any of them. So we're not."

But other area prosecutors remain committed to the practice.

They stress that they offer the deals only to first-timers, the kind of driver who has avoided run-ins with police in the past and just made one mistake.

"I just want to emphasize," said St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert P. McCulloch, "this is first DWIs with no accidents, no injuries — nothing unusual."

But prosecutors at times stretch the definition of what's usual.

Downs, for example, had been arrested twice for drugs before he got the deal.

Hours after he was released from the St. Charles County jail on his second drug charge in 2007, he got into his pickup and drove back, he said, to complain about an abusive guard.

Deputies saw him weaving and caught up to him at the jail, where they said he slurred his speech and smelled like alcohol and marijuana. They said in their report that he refused to be tested.

Downs was charged with DWI. While his case was pending, he was arrested for assaulting his live-in-girlfriend. She told the court that Downs was also a drug addict who, over 10 days, had taken more than 90 of her prescription pain pills.

Four weeks later, prosecutors did everything they could so Downs could keep his license.

DEAL, THEN DEATH

Downs told a judge in criminal court that he had driven drunk. A DWI conviction would have forced Downs to give up his license for at least 30 days, but prosecutors agreed to give him a special no-conviction sentence. That eliminated one way the Department of Revenue could suspend his license.

The department still could suspend Downs' license for refusing the test during the arrest. But prosecutors took that option away the next day.

Prosecutors, representing the Department of Revenue, told another judge in another courtroom that Downs deserved to win his civil appeal.

Under the plea deal, prosecutors and the judge let Downs drive on his promise to get screened for addiction problems within six months.

There's no record Downs was screened before he rammed his full-size 4x4 pickup into the back of a Ford Ranger three weeks later.

In the hours before the crash, police reports show Downs used drugs before heading west on I-70 from St. Charles.

Witnesses recalled him weaving along I-70, running one car onto the shoulder and sideswiping another before he hit the back of Charles Fulhage's small pickup. It spun down an embankment and ricocheted off a tree before rolling down a deep ditch.

Fulhage died five days later. Downs was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.

Interviewed in prison, Downs defended the special deal he got in St. Charles County and said that he had deserved to keep driving. But he also insisted that, had his license been pulled, he wouldn't have driven.

Fulhage's widow said she doubts Downs would have stayed off the road but said she can't believe prosecutors made it so easy for him to remain behind the wheel.

"He wasn't just your backyard barbecue guy who had a few more beers, a one-time offender," Jane Fulhage said. "This guy obviously had a drug problem.

"Three weeks later, he goes out and kills somebody."

DEALS DESPITE RECORDS

Jack Banas, the St. Charles County prosecutor, said police never told his office of the other arrests, so prosecutors made the deal without knowing Downs' complete history.

"Maybe we would have asked for shock (jail) time or a little more done with him," Banas said. "The sad thing about that is, I don't think it would have changed the outcome of what this idiot did."

Despite the tragedy, Banas said, he still supports offering that type of plea deal to nearly all first-time offenders. His county, in the most recent 12-month period studied, offered the deal to 53 percent of drivers who filed appeals.

Those not getting the deal, he said, often were repeat offenders.

"They've been out there. They've had their first break. And they repeated their mistake," Banas said.

It's a common refrain from area prosecutors.

Yet, a Post-Dispatch analysis of licensing and court records found that Jefferson, St. Charles and St. Louis counties gave up on license suspension appeals in nearly 70 cases of repeat offenders arrested in 2007. (The newspaper chose to analyze 2007 arrests because the civil cases can take a year or more to wind through the court system.)

Jefferson County had the highest number of prior offenders getting the deal: 34, or about 11 percent of all repeat offenders who filed an appeal there.

Six of the 34 had been arrested at least twice before for DWI.

Jefferson County's prosecutor, Forrest Wegge, got a no-suspension deal for his own 2003 DWI arrest near Kansas City. He said the county's practice was not based on his personal experience, but was an effort to keep the public safe.

He said that sometimes it was better to try to control a repeat offender's driving habits through a plea deal that imposes special conditions on driving, rather than simply suspending a license, knowing the person will probably drive anyway.

"If revoking someone's license actually prevented further drunk driving incidents, I would not even consider (giving up on) an appeal where the individual had a prior alcohol contact," he said. "Obviously, it is not that simple."

It is simple to the Department of Revenue. It sends a letter to prosecutors reminding them that they are supposed to represent the state, and the state wants the suspensions to stick.

But prosecutors can ignore the state's wishes and keep some repeat offenders legally on the road. And state lawmakers continue to let it happen.

REFORMS SIDETRACKED

The Post-Dispatch found that these deals are one more way the St. Louis area's criminal justice system is soft on drunken drivers.

Over the past two months, the newspaper has reported that authorities routinely fail to charge persistent drunken drivers with felony counts that could imprison them, and that courts commonly accept plea deals to keep drunken driving convictions off the records of most of those arrested, including half of repeat offenders.

After the earlier reports, Gov. Jay Nixon called for reforms.

But even before Nixon's calls, lawmakers had mulled changes in how suspension appeals were handled — then did nothing.

Critics and even some supporters of the no-suspension deal acknowledge the system is broken. Both prosecutors and the Department of Revenue would like the state to take over the legal work on the civil appeals.

Prosecutors are tired of the extra workload. Revenue officials want to ensure suspensions happen.

But on the last day of the most recent legislative session, lawmakers balked at a provision to spend $280,000 a year for more Department of Revenue lawyers to handle the extra caseload. The idea died.

So savvy DWI suspects still know how to play the odds.

In February, the Missouri Highway Patrol stopped a man weaving while exiting I-70 in north St. Louis County.

The trooper said Michael G. Corcoran failed a field sobriety test and refused the breath test.

Corcoran, of St. Ann, bonded out of jail, filed a civil appeal and eventually worked out a no-conviction, no-suspension deal in July with St. Louis County prosecutors. The deal kept a DWI off his record, and he didn't miss a day of driving.

He won't talk about the case, but the four-term state representative — valid license in hand — can drive to Jefferson City to vote on any reforms.

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Friday, October 23, 2009

DWI checkpoint planned in St. Charles County, MO Saturday


St. Charles, MO
Fellow reporter Joel Currier tells me police are not releasing the time of day or specific location.

A “blood only, no-refusal” checkpoint means:

* A driver suspected of drinking will be asked to perform field sobriety tests.
* Drivers who fail the field sobriety tests will be asked to provide blood samples to test their blood-alcohol level. The legal limit in Missouri is 0.08 percent.
* Drivers who refuse to submit to the blood tests will have their licenses suspended immediately, and officers will seek warrants to draw blood.

Officers also will look for other violations during the checkpoint. Typically, the checkpoints are paid for through state grant money. A deputy estimated that a recent checkpoint cost $1,000 to $2,000.

Checkpoints and stepped up traffic enforcement have received a lot of attention lately, particularly when officers added the “no-refusal” tactic for the first time this year.

I spoke in May with Chris Luebbert of the Missouri Department of Transportation’s Highway Safety Division. He said MoDOT received about $6 million in federal funding this year from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. That money can be spent on police and prosecutor training, equipment and enforcement efforts and public education campaigns.

Not every enforcement effort involves a checkpoint or road block. For example, the Missouri Highway Patrol had 14 troopers monitoring traffic on Oct. 13 near Highway 40 and Callahan Road in St. Charles County. They stopped 65 vehicles between 6 a.m. and 2 p.m. and issued 63 summonses and 44 warnings.

Of the citations, 62 were for speeding and one was for failing to wear a seat belt.

The Highway Patrol stepped up enforcement in St. Charles County again during an overnight operation on Oct. 17 and 18. That operation resulted in 48 stopped vehicles, six DWI arrests, 11 tickets for speeding, eight tickets for driver’s license violations and five seat belt violations.

The most recent checkpoint in St. Charles County netted six arrests out of 2,020 vehicles stopped.

Both types of increased traffic enforcement have drawn critics and supporters. Some say extra patrols are more effective and don’t force drivers who are obeying traffic laws to stop. Some say the checkpoints deter drunken drivers from getting behind the wheel.

Fatalities on Missouri roads dropped below 1,000 last year, but state officials have said they want the number to drop even lower. As of Oct. 19, 679 people had died in crashes, a 10.3 percent drop compared to the same time last year. Nationally, fatalities have dropped, too, although some experts attribute the drop to sour economic times.

St. Charles, MO DWI Criminal Defense Attorneys

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Friday, September 25, 2009

DWI checkpoint in St. Charles County on Saturday night


St. Charles County, MO


Lt. Craig McGuire, of the St. Charles County Sheriff’s Department, called this afternoon with the announcement that officers will man a blood-only, no-refusal DWI checkpoint Saturday.

McGuire said officers will stop vehicles to speak with drivers. If a driver is suspected of being intoxicated, he or she will have to perform field sobriety tests.

Those who fail the sobriety tests then must submit to having their blood drawn, he said. If a driver refuses to take the blood test voluntarily, officers will seek a warrant to draw blood.

The checkpoints typically run between 10 p.m. and 3 a.m. Officers — and this case, probably a prosecutor and paramedics — are paid overtime through a grant from the state.

Similar checkpoints have drawn a great deal of commentary on StlToday.com. You can read more here, here and here.

McGuire did not know how many agencies would be participating this weekend. A quick round of phone calls to several larger departments showed that St. Peters also plans on sending officers.

St. Charles, MO DWI Criminal Defense Attorney

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Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Indepencence, MO DWI sobriety checkpoint and saturation patrol results in traffic tickets, DWI arrests

Independence, MO
The Independence Police Traffic Safety Unit conducted a sobriety checkpoint along 23rd Street at Lee’s Summit Road while simultaneously conducting a DWI saturation patrol in that area. The saturation patrol began on Friday 9/18/09 at 10:00 PM and ended on Saturday 9/19/09 at 4:00 AM. The checkpoint was operated from 12:45 AM to 2:00 AM. The entire operation was staffed by (18) officers.

During the hours of operation, (101) cars were checked at the checkpoint and (35) cars were stopped during the saturation patrol with the following arrests and citations:

(2) DWI [(0) from checkpoint, (2) from saturation patrol]
(25) Hazardous Moving Violations
(10) No Valid Driver License
(20) Other Traffic Violations
(10) Warrant Arrest

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Boone County DWI sobriety checkpoint stops 150 drivers, 6 DWI arrests

Columbia, MO
An overnight sobriety checkpoint on Old Plank Road resulted in six arrests on suspicion of driving while intoxicated.

The Boone County Sheriff’s Department conducted the check in the 200 block of Old Plank Road between midnight and 3 a.m. About 150 vehicles were checked, and the arrests included five misdemeanor arrests on suspicion of driving while intoxicated, one felony drug arrest, one arrest on suspicion of driving with a suspended license, four arrests on suspicion of liquor law violations, one zero-tolerance violation, three citations for no insurance and one summons for failure to register a motor vehicle.

After the checkpoint closed, deputies returning to the sheriff’s department encountered another speeding motorist, whom they stopped and found to be intoxicated, increasing the total of DWI arrests to six.

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Sunday, September 13, 2009

Kansas City DWI sobriety checkoint nets 11 arrests

Kansas City, MO
The Kansas City Missouri Police Department conducted a Sobriety Checkpoint on September 11, 2009 from 2300 hours to 0400 hours at 4040 Main street. Southbound traffic was checked with total of 715 vehicles stopped. A total number of 11 DUI arrests were made, along with 1 Driving While Revoked, 1 Other Traffic Violation, 1 Felon in Possession of a Firearm, 2 Hindering and Interfering an Officer city violations, 1 Possession of Cocaine, and 1 Clay County Warrant for Failure to Appear.

Kansas City, MO DWI Criminal Defense Attorneys

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Friday, September 4, 2009

Kansas City PD plan DUI sobriety checkpoint for September 11 weekend


Kansas City, MO
Kansas City police will conduct a sobriety checkpoint next weekend.

The checkpoint will be held sometime the weekend of Sept. 11 at a location known for drunken-driving-related crashes or arrests. No further details were released regarding when or where the checkpoint will be conducted.

Signs will be placed in advance of the checkpoint and officers will direct motorists to an area where an officer can conduct a brief check to determine if the driver should be delayed longer.

Kansas City Drunk Driving Defense Attorneys

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Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Columbia, MO DWI sobriety checkpoint: 7 drivers arrested as "You Drink, You Drive, You Lose" campaign hits the road


Columbia, MO
The "You Drink, You Drive, You Lose" campaign hit the road and snagged 7 drunk drivers.

Columbia Police setup a sobriety checkpoint from 11 p.m. Saturday night to 3 a.m. Sunday morning along Grindstone Parkway. The checkpoint lead to seven DWI arrests, one was a drug impaired driver, thirteen arrests for MIP (Minor in Possession of Alcohol), four arrests for misdemeanor possession of a controlled substance, and other driving-related offenses.

Sergeant Shelley Jones is with the Columbia Police Department. She worked the checkpoint on August 29th.

"It's a long process actually, a lot of paperwork involved. Got to make sure you're compiling with all the court rulings and regulations of the checkpoint," Sgt. Jones said.

This weekend's checkpoint is a part of a nationwide campaign to crack down on drunk driving; it's called the, "You Drink, You Drive, You Lose," campaign. Columbia police weren't the only local department working. Major Tom Reddin with the Boone County Sheriff's Department says Columbia police spearheaded the checkpoint event, but volunteers from the Sheriff's Department, Hallsville Police, and MUPD helped Saturday evening.

Law enforcement weren't the only ones at the checkpoint. Betty Kidwell is the Coordinator of the Boone County Chapter of MADD, which is "Mothers Aganst Drunk Driving." Kidwell and her husband, Tom Kidwell, volunteered their time Saturday night serving donated food to the officers. Kidwell says Hy-Vee and Pizza Hut donated food for her to serve officers at the checkpoint.

Dani Martinson is a server at Sky Hi Bar and Grill in Columbia. She says the sobriety checkpoints will change the clientele in Columbia bars.

Martinson said, "Cutting back on the underage drinking in the bars is going to be a change of business for some of the bars, but I think it's good and it's the law."

Sgt. Jones said the checkpoint required a great deal of manpower - officers checked 698 cars Saturday night - but she says it's worth the effort because the checkpoint makes drivers think twice about driving under the influence.

"It is a deterrent. And it wakes people up to say, gee, maybe I just need to stay here tonight and not drive home," said Sgt. Jones.

Sgt. Jones would not disclose where and when the next sobriety checkpoint will be.

Columbia, MO DWI Defense Lawyers

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DWI crackdown in Columbia and Jefferson Cty part of national campagin, "you drink, you drive, you lose"


Columbia, MO
The national "You drink, you drive, you lose" enforcement effort nabbed dozens of impaired drivers over the weekend.

In Columbia, the check was on Grindstone Parkway Saturday night between 11 p.m. and 3 a.m. Out of 700 vehicles, seven DWI arrests were made.

Police issued 13 arrests or citations to minors in possession of alcohol. 70 drivers failed to show proof of insurance.

Jefferson city police and the Maries County Sheriff's Department also conducted their own separate overnight sobriety checkpoints, both were also part of the "You drink, you drive, you lose" campaign.

Jefferson City Police stopped about 320 vehicles on Missouri Boulevard between 10 p.m. and 2:30 a.m.

Only one DWI arrest was made. Officers also arrested one person for drugs and one person with a warrant for their arrest.

Jefferson City Police say they noticed a high number of designated drivers during the checkpoint.

Maries County deputies checked over 100 vehicles on Highway 28 in Vichy. Three alcohol related arrests and two drug arrests were made.

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Friday, August 21, 2009

University of Missouri - Columbia Police to conduct DWI sobriety checkpoints and car inspections on and near campus 8/20-8/30


Columbia, MO
The MU Police Department will conduct its first vehicle inspections on or near MU, coinciding with the first week of classes. The inspection is part of at least one DWI checkpoint during a 10-day period.

Officers will be present any time between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m. from Aug. 20 to 30 to perform the inspections.

The checkpoint project is part of “You Drink & Drive, You Lose,” a DWI enforcement campaign that will bring together the MU Police Department, the Boone County Sheriff’s Department, the Missouri State Highway Patrol and the Columbia Police Department.

Officials will block off a certain area and inspect a predetermined number of cars in search of intoxicated drivers and other violations, MU Police Chief Brian Weimer said Thursday. Exact locations are unknown.

Weimer said officers' presence will be a reminder that law enforcement takes drinking and driving very seriously.

“We are very fortunate to have the county, city and highway departments helping and working closely together to combat drinking and driving,” Weimer said.

Law enforcement officials have also prepared for the August influx of college students by putting out information hammering home their point: that the MU Police Department will not tolerate alcohol-related driving offenses in the community.

MU Police officers have participated in checkpoints in the past, but this is the first time they will sponsor one, Weimer said.

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DWI sobriety checkpoint roadblock this weekend in Kansas City part of statewide Missouri DWI cackdown


Kansas City, MO
Kansas City police will conduct a sobriety checkpoint this weekend at a location in the city known for DUI-related crashes and arrests.

The checkpoint will begin after 10 p.m. today, Saturday or Sunday. The exact day and location are not disclosed in advance.

Kansas City is among area police departments participating in the “You Drink & Drive. You Lose.” campaign, which kicks off today throughout Missouri.

Lee’s Summit police also have announced they will increase drunk-driving enforcement as part of the campaign, which extends through Sept. 7.

Kansas City DWI Lawyers

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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Kansas City Police Department plans DUI sobbriety checkpoint this weekend


Kansas City, MO
The Kansas City, Missouri Police Department will conduct a sobriety checkpoint on the weekend of August 21-23, 2009 at a location in Kansas City, Missouri that is known for occurrence of DUI related crashes or DUI arrests. This checkpoint will be preceded with a briefing at the Agnes Police Facility, 1328 Agnes at 2200 hours.

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Sunday, August 16, 2009

Kansas City Police Department sobriety checkpoint nets 12 DUI arrests

Kansas City, MO
Kansas City police arrested 12 motorists for driving while intoxicated during a sobriety checkpoint that ended early Saturday morning.

The checkpoint, set up at Southwest Trafficway and West 39th Terrace, also netted two citations for driving while suspended and two arrests on city warrants, Sgt. Ron Podraza said in a written statement.

Police stopped more than 700 vehicles during the five-hour operation.

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Thursday, August 13, 2009

Police in Independence to conduct DWI sobriety checkpoint and DWI saturation partol on Friday

Independence, MO
The Independence Police Traffic Safety Unit will conduct a sobriety checkpoint and DWI saturation patrol on Friday August 14, 2009. The purpose of this operation is to identify and arrest drunk drivers before they injure someone or themselves.

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Sunday, August 9, 2009

Missouri State Highway Patrol and local police to crack down on drunk driving in Pulaski County


Waynesville, MO
Two more law enforcement agencies announced Wednesday that they will be cracking down on drunk drivers in Pulaski County, in addition to the previously announced activities of the Saint Robert Police Department.

Lt. Gary Brankel and Assistant Chief Clarence Liberty of the Waynesville Police Department announced that their officers will be targeting impaired drivers from Aug. 21 to Sept. 7 as part of the “You Drink and Drive, You Lose” statewide campaign, which increases efforts to reduce deaths and serious injuries caused by impaired drivers.

“Driving while intoxicated is one of the most common violent crimes, randomly killing or injuring someone in Missouri every 1.7 hours,” said Police Chief Robert Carter in a prepared statement. “These tragedies are preventable when drivers make a simple, smart choice not to drink and drive.”

Capt. Lee Ann H. Kenley, the commanding officer of Troop I of the Missouri State Highway Patrol, also announced Wednesday that during August, her troopers in Pulaski and Phelps counties will be conducting a sobriety checkpoint in Phelps County and a Pulaski County saturation patrol looking for those who are driving while intoxicated and those who have hazardous moving vehicle violations.

“The checkpoint is designed to check every driver to ensure they are sober; the driving while intoxicated saturation is a mobile operation in which troopers saturate a specific area in an effort to arrest alcohol or drug-impaired drivers,” Kenley said in a prepared statement. “The hazardous moving vehicle operation targets those individuals who are operating their vehicle in a hazardous manner, and thus, more likely to be involved in an accident.”

Those who see a violation of law or an emergency situation on the roadways may call the state patrol’s emergency hotline at (800) 525-5555 or dial *55 on their cell phones.

The previously reported St. Robert enforcement activities include sobriety checkpoints using police officer and firefighter overtime, as well as other activities that haven’t been specified in detail.

Consequences of drunk driving, according to a Waynesville Police Department release, include:

• Those who cause a fatal crash while intoxicated can be charged with involuntary manslaughter, a felony carrying a maximum penalty of seven years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

• Even a first-offense conviction carries a maximum penalty of six months in jail and a $500 fine, along with a 90-day driver’s license suspension.

• A second-offense conviction carries a maximum penalty of one year in jail and a $1,000 fine, as well as a yearlong driver’s license suspension.

• Those who drink and drive while under age 21 can be charged with being a minor in possession of alcohol, resulting in a first-offense suspension of their driver’s license for 90 days in additon to any other suspension resulting from “point” assessment on an alcohol conviction.

• Those convicted of driving while intoxicated will have difficulty finding an insurance company willing to insure them, and their rates will be significantly higher.

Missouri DWI Criminal Defense Lawyers

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DWI "drunk driving" sobreity checkpoints planned in St. Robert during August


St. Roberts, MO
Police and firefighters are gearing up for another crackdown on drunk driving this month in St. Robert, according to Sgt. Butch Hohman, the head of the traffic enforcement division for the city’s police department.

“A new month is coming and to try and reduce the amount of alcohol-related traffic accidents and alcohol-related driving offenses, the St. Robert Police Department will be conducting sobriety checkpoints and other enforcement activities throughout the month,” Hohman said in a prepared statement. “So if you enter a checkpoint reduce your speed and be patient; you will only be detained a short time, then you will be on your way.”

Hohman asked drivers to keep in mind that drunk drivers kill more people in one year than any other criminal act. Nationally, that means more than 17,800 people were killed in alcohol related traffic crashes in 2006. About 41 percent of all traffic deaths in the United States are related to alcohol, Hohman said.

Last month’s DWI checkpoint on the night of July 4 and early morning of July 5 showed that about 2 percent of St. Robert drivers are still drunk behind the wheel between the hours of 10 p.m. and 2 a.m., despite an aggressive grant-funded program that pays overtime for local police to dedicate extra time to stopping drunk driving.

In St. Robert, that means police officers work together with city firefighters and volunteers from Mark Twain REACT to set up a police checkpoint on a major city street with extra lighting and manpower provided by firefighters and others. Locations vary, but in the past have included Old Route 66 and Highway Z since those roads have several locations with an adjacent parking lot where suspected drunk drivers can be pulled off the road and checked for alcohol consumption without delaying most drivers longer than needed for a brief check.

During the July checkpoint on Old Route 66, police stopped 279 vehicles, resulting in seven people being charged with driving while intoxicated, two passengers being charged with being minors in possession of alcohol by consumption and one person being charged with driving with a suspended license.

According to statistics provided by St. Robert police, 243 people died in more than 7,780 alcohol-related traffic crashes in Missouri in 2007, the last year for which complete statistics are available. That corresponds to a death or injury every 1.7 hours.

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Sunday, July 26, 2009

Nine arrested for DWI at sobreity checkpont in Steelville


Springfield, MO
Troopers with Missouri Highway Patrol Troop I based in Rolla made nine driving-while-intoxicated arrests during a sobriety checkpoint July 18, according to the Missouri Highway Patrol.
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The checkpoint near the entrance of the Steelville City Park involved stopping 679 vehicles.

Along with the DWI arrests, troopers issued 10 seat belt violations, one vehicle registration violation, seven license violations, three uninsured motorist violations and three minor in possession of alcohol arrests.

Troopers also issued 70 warnings.

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Kansas City Police Department DWI sobriety checkpoint nets 18 arrests


Kansas City, MO
The Kansas City Missouri Police Department assisted by the Missouri State Highway Patrol conducted a Sobriety Checkpoint on July 24, 2009 from 2200 hours to 0400 hours at 3719 Independence Avenue. East and Westbound traffic was checked with total of 527 vehicles stopped.

A total number of 18 DUI arrests were made, along with 2 Possession of Marijuana charges, 2 Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, 9 Driving While Revoked, 1 Hazardous Moving Violation, 3 Other traffic violations, 2 Seatbelt violations, 1 State Warrant, and 25 City Warrants

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Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Jackson County, MO you drink, you drive, you lose campaign nets no DWI arrests, still considered a success


Jackson County, MO
The Jackson County Sheriff’s Office recently participated in a state-wide anti-drinking and driving campaign called You Drink, You Drive, You Lose.

According to a press release, during the Fourth of July holiday weekend, sheriff’s officers issued a total of 114 citations, including 23 speeding violations, four seatbelt violations, two careless driving violations and 11 driving while revoked violations. No impaired drivers were encountered, however, the sheriff’s office considered the extra enforcement a success.

“Driving while under the influence of drugs or alcohol is never worth the risk of a tragedy,” Jackson County Sheriff Mike Sharp said, “We’re working to keep our roads safer.”

Driving while intoxicated remains one of the top causes of fatal car crashes in Missouri. In 2007, 234 people died in more that 7,780 alcohol-related traffic crashes.

“Enforcement efforts help to take impaired drivers off the road and to educate drivers not to drink and drive,” Sharp said. “Enforcement such as this will make it safer to travel in Jackson County.”

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DWI sobriety checkpoints net eight arrests during holiday weekend near Neosho, MO


Merriam, MO

...and MADD provided coffee to the officers and pamphlets to drivers. How sweet.
Eight people were arrested on various charges during a sobriety checkpoint, held Friday at the interchange of U.S. 60 and U.S. 71.

The checkpoint was held for five hours, from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. and a total of 1,012 vehicles were
checked.

One person was arrested for suspicion of driving while intoxicated, while four others were arrested for driving while suspended or revoked.

Another three were taken into custody on outstanding warrants.

Seven others were issued summonses for driving without a valid license, while another two were given court summonses for operating a motorcycle without a valid endorsement on their drivers’ licenses.

Yet another person was issued a summons for failing to secure a child in a child restraint, while five people were given a Breathalyzer test at the scene.

These five drivers showed a presence of alcohol, but it was beneath the legally recognized limit. These drivers were released to family or friends to take home.

“It’s hard to measure success,” said Neosho Police Chief Dave McCracken. “A lot of the reason for these checkpoints is educating people as well. The biggest thing about these safety points is for people not to drive while they are intoxicated. But they should also keep their warrants cleaned up so they won’t be arrested on an outstanding warrant, not drive with a suspended license, or operate a motorcycle without an endorsement on their license.

“These are the kinds of things, while not on the magnitude of driving while intoxicated, are important as well. It serves as a reminder of ‘Yeah, I need to go down there and get that taken care of.’ ”

Several area law enforcement agencies also took part in the checkpoint, including the Newton County Sheriff’s Department, Jasper County Sheriff’s Department, Lawrence County Sheriff’s Department, and the police departments of Webb City, Carterville, Diamond and Joplin.

McCracken said these agencies make up a multi-jurisdictional task force, and Neosho officers had been out to assist in large checkpoint operations in other cities in the past.

“It allows us to conduct a checkpoint at a busy intersection and be more visible,” McCracken said.
Also helping with the checkpoint were the members of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, who provided coffee to the officers and pamphlets to give to motorists.

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Friday, July 3, 2009

Missouri State Highway Patrol, St. Robert, and Waynesville join forces for holiday weekend drunk driving crackdown


Pulaski County, MO
Local law enforcement personnel want to make sure that those who want to drink this weekend in Pulaski County don’t get behind the wheel of a car.

Representatives of three different police agencies have announced in recent weeks that they’ll be conducting drunk driving patrols over the Independence Day weekend. At Thursday afternoon’s meeting of the Waynesville Police and Emergency Services Committee, Police Chief Bob Carter said his agency, the St. Robert Police Department, and the Missouri State Highway Patrol will all be conducting drunk driving enforcement activities in their jurisdictions, staggered at different times during the weekend beginning Friday.

“We wish everybody a good holiday, but at the same time we are going to do a DWI saturation patrol that we signed up for with the state,” Carter said. “Don’t quote me on the times, but I know ours are offset so we can assist each other if need be.”

St. Robert police issued a press release in mid-June indicating that they’ll be participating in the statewide effort as well.

“It’s never worth the risk to drive while under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Drivers could lose their license, pay large fines, or worse of all, cause a tragic loss of life,” said St. Robert Police Chief Curtis Curenton in a prepared statement.

According to Curenton’s press release, in the year 2007, a total of 243 people died in more than 7,780 alcohol-related traffic crashes. That’s an average of one death or injury every 1.7 hours.

Earlier in the month, Capt. Lee Ann H. Kenley, the Rolla-based Troop I commander for the Missouri State Highway Patrol, said that a DWI saturation patrol will be conducted in Pulaski County. That operation took place on June 13, with five troopers assigned who stopped 48 different vehicles, resulting in two citations for drunk driving, 12 for speeding, three for hazardous moving violations, two for driver’s license violations, and four misdemeanor drug violations, in addition to 50 warnings.

“(I) would like to remind motorists that in the past, approximately 25 percent of all fatality traffic crashes on Missouri’s highways were alcohol-related,” Kenley said in her prepared statement urging Missourians to “be responsible and to realize that alcohol and vehicles are a deadly mix.”

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Thursday, July 2, 2009

Kansas City Police plan holiday DUI checkpoints, officers to crack down on drunken drivers


Kansas City, MO
July is one of the deadliest driving months of the year, and 80 percent of the fatal crashes involve drunken drivers.

Police are planning to step up enforcement and are considering setting up DUI checkpoints this holiday weekend.

"We have never had a checkpoint where we arrested zero people," Kansas City police Capt. Rich Lockhart told KMBC's Jim Flink.

Lockhart said the checkpoints serve as a deterrent and they save lives.

"When you're driving through that checkpoint, you're asking yourself, 'Did I have too much to drink? Would I do this again?'" Lockhart said.

One officer said he has worked four fatal crashes during a previous Fourth of July.

The locations of the DUI checkpoints haven't been announced.

Police said they'll also have groups of officers out looking for erratic drivers.

Every year in Missouri, there are nearly 8,000 alcohol-related crashes. Over the last five years, an average of at least 250 people have died each year in those crashes.

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Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Lake Saint Louis police to step up DWI patrols over holiday weekend


Lake St. Louis, MO
Lake Saint Louis police will increase enforcement this Fourth of July weekend when it comes to stopping impaired motorists and boaters.

"We are working with other criminal justice agencies to protect Lake Saint Louis citizens from impaired drivers," Police Chief Michael Force said in a release. "We will patrol area roadways and lakes to arrest impaired drivers and will do everything we can to see that they are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law."

At a minimum, impaired drivers could lose their license and face high fines and court costs in addition to attorney fees, Force said. At the worst, they could go to jail for vehicular manslaughter or homicide, he added.

"Our goal is to prevent that from happening," Force said.

The Lake Saint Louis Community Association Water Patrol and the Lake Saint Louis Police Department have partnered to address the issue of intoxicated boaters on the city's lakes, Force said in a release. This partnership will place police officers alongside Water Patrol authorities to target intoxicated boaters.

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DWI enforcement set for this weekend in Lee's Summit


Lee's Summit, MO


The Lee’s Summit Police Department will join state and local law enforcement agencies in a DWI enforcement campaign over the holiday weekend, from July 3 to July 5.

Saturation traffic patrols will assist in an endeavor to reduce deaths and serious injuries caused by impaired drivers.

Driving while intoxicated is one of the most common violent crimes, randomly killing or injuring someone in Missouri every 1.7 hours.

With an increased presence of patrol officers, the department hopes to prevent these tragedies which are avoided when drivers make a simple, smart choice to not drink and drive.

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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Missouri Water Patrol plans DUI checkpoints


Kansas City, MO
The Missouri Water Patrol plans to conduct sobriety checkpoints later this month as part of a national safe boating campaign.

The Water Patrol will conduct multiple sobriety checkpoints on waters throughout the state the weekend of June 26-28 as part of the national “Operation Dry Water.”

The campaign, spearheaded by the National Association of State Boating Law Administrators, is aimed at raising the awareness and reducing the incidences of operating vessels while intoxicated. Alcohol is a contributing factor in more than a fifth of all fatal boating accidents, according to the Water Patrol.

At the checkpoints, boaters can expect to be stopped where officers will perform a basic safety check of the boat’s equipment. If the officer suspects the operator to be under the influence, the boater will be asked to submit to a field sobriety test.

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Thursday, June 11, 2009

Sobriety checkpoint planned this weekend in Kansas City


Kansas City, MO
Kansas City police will conduct a sobriety checkpoint this weekend at an undisclosed location known for drunken-driving-related crashes and arrests.

Police didn’t release which day the checkpoint will be held or a general location. During the operation of the checkpoint, police said they will place signs on the street alerting motorists of the checkpoint. Motorists will be directed to an area where officers will check to determine whether a driver should be detained longer.

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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Missouri Highway Patrol cracking down on drunk drivers


St. Louis, MO
The Missouri Highway Patrol is cracking down on suspected drunk drivers. Troopers have one mission, saving lives. Members of the Highway Patrol are spread out across St. Louis County trying to arrest DWI drivers before an accident happens. The department hopes to reduce the number of alcohol related accidents and deaths.

The Alcohol Related Response Enforcement Strike Team, or A.R.R.E.S.T., is made up of six troopers based in Weldon Spring. One of those members is Trooper Matt Schmitt. He says once a month they'll take to the roads in area counties looking for those driving while intoxicated.

"People that are swerving within a single lane, and people that are driving onto the shoulder and back onto the road. People that just aren't responding to traffic like a normal person would."

The project has been going on for about a year, resulting in 60 DWI arrests.

"We're out here to reduce fatalities on the roadway," explained Trooper Schmidt.

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Richmond, MO city council tables grant for DWI check points


Richmond, MO
The Richmond City Council has deferred a decision on a grant to purchase equipment for DWI checkpoints until further study.
The council voted 7-1 Thursday night to send the grant application to the Public Safety Committee for further review. Jason Berning was the only no vote.

The grant is from the Missouri Department of Transportation for more than $25,000. The money would go towards the purchase of all of the necessary equipment needed to conduct a check point and overtime pay for officers.
Some councilmen were concerned about some of the wording in the grant that requires the city to make a dedicated effort to seek more funding if funds run out.
Police Chief Terri McWilliams said the only stipulation is that the city not sell or give away the equipment and to maintain it.
“They have DWI enforcement. They have safety belt enforcement. We do all of those things anyway and we send those statistics to them,” McWilliams said. “That’s what they’re talking about – a dedicated attempt. We’ll still attempt to participate in those programs, which we do now anyway. There is nothing to financially support.”
McWilliams, along with Mayor Lance Green and City Administrator Rick Childers seemed bewildered by some of the other councilmen’s reluctance to move forward. McWilliams said if Richmond does not want the money, someone else would take it.
“This is free money and if we don’t do this tonight we lose it and then Orrick is going to have it or Wood Heights is going to have it or somewhere else,” she said.
McWilliams told councilmen that the department did not seek out this grant. She said a representative of MoDOT, Randy Silvey, contacted the city and made an offer.
“There is free money out there when you’re doing the right thing,” McWilliams said. “These people called us and offered this to us because they have got a little left over in their end of the year budget and they have to get rid of it or their budget will be refused next year. So they called us.”
Silvey could not be reached on Friday and did not return a message left by press time today.
Councilman Jim Dunwoodie also questioned the effectiveness of the checkpoints and asked McWilliams about it. McWilliams said she did not know the results of the checkpoint.
A checkpoint conducted in Orrick in March netted four minor in possession charges but no DWI arrests were made. According to Richmond Police patrol records six DWI arrests were made in April.

Missouri Driving While Intoxicated News and Information

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Missouri State Highway Patrol Troop D plans DWI saturation patrols in Dallas County


Springfield, MO
Missouri Highway Patrol Troop D will conduct four driving-while-intoxicated saturations in Dallas County in June, July and August, according to a news release.

Areas selected for enforcement are based on a high number of drinking-related traffic crashes, high numbers of contacts with drivers who have been drinking and officer input as to probable contact with DWI violators based on officers' past experiences, the release said.

Missouri DWI Information

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Thursday, May 21, 2009

Independence plans DUI checkpoint on Friday


Independence MO
From Independence PD: The Independence Police Traffic Safety Unit will conduct a sobriety checkpoint on Friday May 22, 2009. The purpose of this checkpoint is to identify and arrest drunk drivers before they injure someone or themselves.

It is also a highly visible deterrent to those who may see the checkpoint but not pass through it. The checkpoint will be located in an area of Independence where DWI arrests and alcohol related crashes are prevalent.

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Sunday, May 17, 2009

‘Blood-only’ DWI checkpoints in St. Charles County catch 18 suspected drunken drivers


St. Charles, MO

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Eighteen drivers were arrested Saturday in two “blood-only” DWI checkpoints in St. Charles County, authorities say.

Police from several departments in the county, including St. Charles, St. Peters, O’Fallon and the sheriff’s department, ran the checkpoints from 4 to 10:30 p.m. Saturday.

One was at Highways 94 and D near Francis Howell High School; the other was at Highway DD and Interstate 64.

Overall, police checked about 3,100 vehicles at the two locations.

Police took blood from all 18 drivers arrested suspicion of driving drunk.

Five of those arrested drivers initially refused to submit to a chemical test so police obtained search warrants to take their blood.

Last month, police set up a similar “no-refusal” checkpoint along Boone’s Lick Road at Fifth Street in St. Charles, believed to be the first of its kind in the state. There, police required blood tests from drivers who refused to submit to any form of chemical test after being arrested on suspicion of DWI.

At Saturday’s checkpoints, police bypassed the breath test and opted to take blood instead.

St. Charles, MO DWI Lawyers | Driving While Intoxicated Defense Attorneys

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Light traffic through St. Charles DWI checkpoint; are checkpoints effective?


St. Charles, MO
Six drivers were arrested during last week’s much-publicized DWI checkpoint in St. Charles. That’s out of 135 total cars stopped during the 4-hour “no refusal” checkpoint on Boone’s Lick Road near Fifth Street.

Even for a weeknight in St. Charles, police said the traffic was light. Thursday nights are typically pretty busy down on Main Street. After the Post-Dispatch ran a front page story Wednesday about the checkpoint, several local TV news stations picked up the story as well.

I talked to some police Friday morning about the checkpoint; some wondered whether it had gotten too much publicity.

That begs the question of whether checkpoints are truly effective at reducing drunken driving or if they just change people’s behavior. Police say checkpoints are successful regardless of how many people they arrest, because they may prompt people to be more cautious.

Critics of checkpoints say some people who drive drunk just avoid them and aren’t likely to change their behavior in the long term.

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that checkpoints are constitutional, but also recommended standards and guidelines for police departments planning checkpoints so as not to infringe on individual rights.

Also, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration provides recommendations for checkpoint procedures in a document called “The Use of Sobriety Checkpoints for Impaired Driving Enforcement.”

What do you think? Are checkpoints a good use of time and money? Or are they stop drivers unnecessarily and without reasonable suspicion?

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Sunday, April 19, 2009

Kansas City police announce DUI checkpoint

Kansas City
Kansas City police will conduct a sobriety checkpoint the weekend of April 24 through April 26 at a location in the city known for DUI-related crashes and arrests.

The checkpoint will begin after 11 p.m. at the chosen location.

Motorists will be stopped briefly while officers conduct a check, then either detained or sent on with educational material about drunk driving.

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Digg Yahoo! Del.icio.us Facebook Reddit Drudge Google Fark logo Fark Stumble It! Six arrested for DWI at St. Charles 'no refusal' checkpoint


St. Charles, MO
Six people were arrested on suspicion of driving while intoxicated overnight at a St. Charles "no refusal" checkpoint, police said.


Only one of those six refused a breath test, prompting officers to seek a warrant for a blood sample, said Lt. Craig McGuire of the St. Charles County Sheriff's Department. Officers from several local departments stopped 135 cars on Boone's Lick Road just east of Fifth Street, he said. The intersection is near Ameristar Casino and the town's Historic Main Street.

McGuire said officers found one other violation. One of the drivers arrested on suspicion of DWI also had some marijuana and drug paraphernalia, he said.
bullet Earlier story: St. Charles police will go for blood tests on DWI suspects


The checkpoint drew attention because of the blood test warrants. Police said the warrants were a tool in the fight against drunk driving. Others questioned the impact of such checkpoints on civil liberties.

McGuire said the combination of the checkpoint occurring on Thursday night and greater publicity might have led to fewer motorists passing through it.

Under implied consent laws, drivers in Missouri and Illinois can lose their licenses for a period of time for refusing to submit to testing of their blood-alcohol content. Police can seek warrants to draw a driver's blood, but that typically has not been done at checkpoints.

St. Charles' "no refusal" checkpoint was not the first in the area.

Police in Illinois conducted a "no refusal" checkpoint last week at Broadway and Third Street in East St. Louis. One driver refused a breath test. A judge signed a warrant, and the driver was taken to a hospital for a blood test.

The East St. Louis checkpoint also resulted in:

-- Seven arrests for driving under the influence;

--54 possession or transportation of open alcohol violations or minor in possession by consumption violations;

--43 arrests on warrants;

--42 citations for driving without insurance

--39 tickets for driving while the driver's license was suspended or revoked;

--12 seat belt violations;

--Four drug arrests;

--Two unlawful use of a weapon arrests;

--Two child restraint violations

--One obstructing justice arrest

Two weapons also were seized during the Illinois checkpoint. Authorities described them as a pistol and an "illegal assault rifle."

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Wednesday, April 15, 2009

"No Reusal" DWI checkpoint in St. Charles planned for Thursday, 11pm-3am

St. Charles, MO
Police in St. Charles County are drawing a new weapon in their fight to stop drunk drivers — blood testing.

On Thursday night, about two dozen officers from several area police departments are holding what they're calling a "no refusal" checkpoint to catch impaired drivers.

From 11 p.m. to 3 a.m., police will stop all drivers at a busy intersection near Interstate 70, the city's Main Street corridor and the Ameristar Casino. If those arrested on suspicion of driving drunk refuse an officer's request for a breath test, police plan to get on-the-spot court orders for blood tests from a nearby on-call prosecutor and circuit judge.

Though the approach has already been tested in at least three other states, police say this style of checkpoint combining the "no refusal" element may be the first of its kind in Missouri. Police and advocates for tougher enforcement hope the effort adds muscle to a criminal justice system that often fails to keep drunk drivers off the roads.


"Having the blood or breath result is an essential part of DWI enforcement," said St. Charles County sheriff's Deputy Travis Jones, who is organizing the checkpoint. "We just want to go through a night with no fatalities or serious wrecks."

Over the past two months, at least 10 people have been killed in the St. Louis area by suspected drunk drivers, some of whom had prior DWI convictions.

Experts say it's legal to require blood tests from drivers arrested for DWI. Most states, including Missouri and Illinois, have implied consent laws that mandate breath, blood, saliva or urine samples if asked by a police officer.

Once arrested, drivers who refuse the tests risk losing their licenses for up to a year.

DWI checkpoints with mandatory blood tests raise civil liberties concerns, said Tony Rothert, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Eastern Missouri.

"That anyone who happens to be driving through St. Charles could be stopped and have their blood forcibly removed from them does seem to me like the government is overreaching," he said.

Travis Noble, a Clayton DWI lawyer, questioned whether the practice provides judges enough information to reasonably issue police warrants for blood tests.

"I think a judge would need to be very cautious," Noble said.

Police in more rural areas, such as Franklin, Lincoln and Warren counties, regularly seek warrants for blood tests in DWI cases even if it means waking prosecutors and judges late at night. But in busier, more populated areas, police typically request warrants for blood only in the most serious cases.

"It's been a very effective tool for prosecuting DWI," Warren County Prosecutor Mike Wright said.

And the tactic appears to be catching on locally, with a checkpoint similar to the one in St. Charles planned this weekend in Franklin County, and two more in St. Charles County next month.

"You can have blood drawn even if you don't want your blood drawn." said Peter Joy, a law professor at Washington University.

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Tuesday, March 17, 2009

34 arrests made during Springfield, Greene County DWI enforcements


Springfield, MO
Springfield police and Greene County Sheriff's deputies arrested almost three dozen people for alleged drunken driving during special enforcement efforts this past weekend.
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The crackdown was part of the grant-funded "You Drink & Drive -- YOU LOSE" statewide campaign.

Springfield police arrested 23 people for driving while intoxicated between Friday and Sunday through a combination of high- intensity DWI patrols and a sobriety checkpoint near the downtown area.

The Greene County Sheriff's Office, meanwhile, arrested 11 people for DWI between Saturday evening and Sunday morning.

An additional 16 deputies worked grant-funded overtime patrolling various locations in the county during the effort, the sheriff's office said in a news release.

In addition to the arrests for DWI, deputies arrested seven minors for possession of alcohol, one person for supplying alcohol to a minor and six people for driving without a valid license, the release said. Two people were cited for resisting arrest.

Other arrests included one for felony drug possession, two for misdemeanor drug possession, and two for for active warrants.

The efforts were aimed at taking impaired drivers off the roads, Springfield police said in a news release noting that driving while intoxicated is a top cause of fatal car crashes in Missouri.

In 2007, 243 people were killed and 4,897 injured in more than 7,780 alcohol-related crashes, the release said.

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Branson, MO DWI checkpoint coming


Branson, MO
The Branson Police Department, in conjunction with the Missouri Highway Patrol and the Taney County Sheriff's Office, will be conducting a driving while intoxicated checkpoint in Branson this month, a news release from the city said.
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The DWI checkpoints are intended to remove offenders from the road and reduced the number of people killed and injured in alcohol-related crashes, the news release said.

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Saturday, December 20, 2008

Police Net Two Dozen For No Seat Belts


Springfield, MO
A special enforcment project by Springfield police over the Thanksgiving period resulted in more than two dozen tickets issued for drivers failing to wear seat belts, police said today.

The Springfield Police Department joined a number of other law agencies in Missouri for the Click It of Ticket project November 26. Police reported 27 tickets written for no seat belts - 26 speeding tickets, 2 DWI's and 35 other traffic violations.

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Friday, September 26, 2008

Springfield, MO Police, sheriff plan weekend DWI effort


Springfield, MO

The Springfield Police Department and the Greene County Sheriff’s Department will put 25 officers on local roads the weekend to man driving-while-intoxicated checkpoints, the police department has announced.

The operation funded through a Missouri Department of Transportation grant will involve checkpoints where officers will check driver’s licenses and conduct further tests on drivers they believe to be intoxicated.

The department estimates drivers who produce a license and who have not been drinking will be delayed about three minutes.

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Monday, September 8, 2008

Dozen arrests made at DWI checkpoint in Greene County


Springfield, MO
A DWI checkpoint set up on East Sunshine Street netted a dozen arrests, reported Capt. Randy Gibson of the Greene County Sheriff's Department.
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The checkpoint was set up at the 3900 block of East Sunshine from 11 p.m. Saturday to 3 a.m. Sunday. Thirty-five off-duty deputies worked the area, paid by a grant from the Missouri Department of Transportation.

Gibson said the effort led to checks on 322 vehicles, eight arrests of those suspected of driving while intoxicated and two arrests related to drugs. There were also two arrests of people who had active warrants.

Officers wrote 12 tickets for traffic offenses.

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Monday, September 1, 2008

DWI checkpoint leads to several arrests in Greene County


Springfield, MO
The Greene County Sheriff's Department helped keep Springfield's streets safer this holiday weekend by conducting a DWI checkpoint Saturday night.

Thirty-five deputies stopped traffic at the 3900 block of east Sunshine between 11 p.m. Saturday and 3 a.m. Sunday.

Deputies made eight DWI arrests, two drug arrests, two active warrant arrests and ticketed twelve people for driving without a license.

The checkpoint was funded by a grant from the Missouri Department of Transportation.

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Saturday, August 30, 2008

Two arrested at Osage Beach DWI checkpoints


Osage Beach, MO
A split sobriety checkpoint over the weekend marks the fourth DWI checkpoint for the city of Osage Beach this year. Officers stopped 226 drivers on Highway 54, and 117 drivers on Highway 42 overnight on Friday, citing two drivers for driving while intoxicated. Officers also made one drug arrest at the checkpoint, and two arrests for driving while suspended or revoked. Osage Beach Police Sergeant Arlyne Page says the installation of the checkpoint program this year continues to serve as a deterrent to drinking and driving.

"It's following the same trend that it has in the past," Page said, "eventually with the anticipated increase of checkpoints people will get the message."

The Osage Beach Police plan at least two more sobriety checkpoints this year. The city ran one checkpoint last year with the assistance of the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Kansas City sobriety checkpoint yields 37 DUI arrests


Kansas City, MO
Kansas City police arrested 37 people for drunken driving during a sobriety checkpoint late Friday and early this morning.

Police stopped 1,447 vehicles at U.S. 169 and Lou Holland Drive between 9 p.m. Friday and 4 a.m. this morning. In addition to the drunken-driving arrests, authorities also made several other arrests, including 13 outstanding warrants, one possession of marijuana, one endangering the welfare of a child, one minor in possession, one hazardous moving violation and one other traffic charge.

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Saturday, August 9, 2008

Cole County DWI checkpoint nets 9 arrests


Jefferson City, MO
Law enforcement at a DWI checkpoint in Jefferson City Saturday night didn't have to wait long for their first offender. It took just three minutes.

The Cole County Sheriff's Department along with Jefferson City Police and the Highway Patrol stopped cars in the 36-hundred block of Highway 50. Almost three-hundred cars were checked.

In all the sobriety checkpoint netted nine violations, including three for driving while intoxicated, one for possession of drugs, and another for an undocumented alien.

A grant from MODOT helped fund the checkpoint.

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Boone County DWI checkpoint nets 18 arrests


Columbia, MO
A drunk driving saturation checkpoint in Boone County Friday night netted eighteen arrests.

The Boone County Sheriff's Department set up checkpoint on Shalimar Dr. at Rangeline. From eleven pm. until three am., deputies checked over three-hundred cars.

They arrested six for driving while intoxicated and three more for possession of a controlled substance. Seven drivers were also arrested for driving on a suspended license.

Mothers Against Drunk Driving, or MADD, was part of the volunteer squad helping out at the checkpoint.

Motorists did have a warning. The sheriff's department let newspapers and other media know that the checkpoint was planned for last night, although the exact location was not given.

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Bolivar DWI crackdown begins Aug. 15


Bolivar, MO
The Bolivar Police Department will be cracking down on impaired drivers Aug. 15 through Sept. 1 during the You Drink & Drive, You Lose statewide crackdown. Law enforcement efforts will be increased in an endeavor to reduce the deaths and serious injuries caused by impaired drivers. Those caught drinking and driving could lose their license, money and freedom.

“Driving while intoxicated is one of the most common violent crimes, randomly killing or injuring someone in Missouri every one and one-half hours,” Police Chief Michael Seibert said. “These tragedies are preventable when drivers make a simple, smart choice not to drink and drive.”

Is it worth it? Consider some of the consequences if you choose to drive while intoxicated:

• If you cause a fatal crash while intoxicated, you can be charged with involuntary manslaughter, a felony resulting in up to seven years of jail time, a $5,000 fine or both.

• Your license can be suspended for 90 days on your first conviction. You could be fined up to $500 and spend up to six months in jail.

• A second conviction results in a year-long revocation of your license. You could be fined up to $1,000 and spend up to one year in jail.

• Minors may additionally be subject to a minor in possession citation, resulting in license suspension for 90 days for a first offense. This is in addition to any suspension resulting from “point” assessment on an alcohol conviction.

• Insurance coverage will be difficult to find and your rates will be significantly higher

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Sunday, July 27, 2008

Boone County DWI checkpoint nets 18 arrests


Columbia, MO
A drunk driving saturation checkpoint in Boone County Friday night netted eighteen arrests.

The Boone County Sheriff's Department set up checkpoint on Shalimar Dr. at Rangeline. From eleven pm. until three am., deputies checked over three-hundred cars.

They arrested six for driving while intoxicated and three more for possession of a controlled substance. Seven drivers were also arrested for driving on a suspended license.

Mothers Against Drunk Driving, or MADD, was part of the volunteer squad helping out at the checkpoint.

Motorists did have a warning. The sheriff's department let newspapers and other media know that the checkpoint was planned for last night, although the exact location was not given.

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Cole County DWI checkpoint nets 9 arrests


Jefferson City, MO
Law enforcement at a DWI checkpoint in Jefferson City Saturday night didn't have to wait long for their first offender. It took just three minutes.

The Cole County Sheriff's Department along with Jefferson City Police and the Highway Patrol stopped cars in the 36-hundred block of Highway 50. Almost three-hundred cars were checked.

In all the sobriety checkpoint netted nine violations, including three for driving while intoxicated, one for possession of drugs, and another for an undocumented alien.

A grant from MODOT helped fund the checkpoint.

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Boone County sheriff deputies operated DWI sobriety checkpoint while MADD served them food


Columbia, MO

Photo: Boone County sheriff’s Deputy Brandon Weber checks the results of a motorist’s breath test during a sobriety checkpoint Friday night on Shalimar Drive off Highway 763, also known as Range Line Street. Sheriff’s deputies and police halted more than 300 vehicles that night and made six DWI arrests.
In the effort to catch drunk drivers at a sobriety checkpoint, technology can sometimes work against law enforcement officers.

Betty Kidwell, an organizer of the Boone County chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, said motorists who pass through the checkpoint quickly alert their friends. "They get hot on those cell phones," Kidwell said.

Kidwell, husband Tom Kidwell and another woman served supper in parking lots neighboring a checkpoint site Friday night to almost 20 Boone County sheriff’s deputies, four Columbia police officers and one Hallsville police officer on checkpoint duty.

The site on Shalimar Drive, just west of Highway 763, was chosen after officers reviewed alcohol-related arrests and wrecks in the area, said sheriff’s Sgt. Scott Ewing, the checkpoint supervisor. The street was busier than usual because it is a detour route for traffic on Brown School Road, which is closed for construction.

Motorist Mitchel Wray, 23, of Columbia, called the Shalimar site a "good place" for a checkpoint. "There’s only two ways out of this neighborhood," he said.

In the event some motorists try to avoid a checkpoint, Columbia police Sgt. Tim Moriarity said, organizers have a secondary checkpoint site where they can move if the number of cars passing through dramatically drops. Many drinkers are aware when a checkpoint is planned.

"There’s a pretty good network," Moriarity said. "I’ve been in a bar before when they’ve announced a checkpoint."

Those announcements are not a bad thing, Ewing said. Keeping motorists aware of the enforcement effort means officers are serious about drunk driving. The ultimate goal is to make no arrests at a checkpoint, he said.

Between 11 p.m. Friday and 3 a.m. yesterday, officers stopped 318 vehicles at the Shalimar checkpoint. Six drivers were cited for driving while intoxicated. Officers made arrests and issued summonses for other offenses as well, including the arrest of two men on suspicion of drug-trafficking.

A similar checkpoint last month in Hallsville resulted in one DWI arrest from among almost 200 vehicles stopped.

Motorists typically are delayed for minutes as officers look at their driver’s license and proof of insurance. An officer also walks to the front and back of each vehicle to inspect license plates.

If an officer senses signs of alcohol consumption or the driver admits to drinking that night, he or she is asked to leave the vehicle and escorted to a nearby parking lot for field-sobriety tests. A van with a Breathalyzer machine inside idles in the parking lot, waiting for any DWI suspects.

On Friday, the driver of one of the first vehicles stopped was handcuffed after allegedly driving with a suspended license, one of seven such arrests that night.

Columbia police Officer Curtis Perkins made the first DWI arrest at about 11:30 p.m. He escorted the driver and lone occupant from a passenger vehicle to the parking lot, where the driver appeared to fail various field-sobriety tests. After his arrest, a deputy said, the driver’s blood alcohol measured at more than three times the legal limit of .08 percent.

Another driver, Dwayne Whaley, 47, who lives in north Boone County, was asked to take a field-sobriety test after he told an officer he had drunk two beers about four hours earlier. He passed the test and was released.

"It was scary," said Whaley, who works as a utility meter reader. "I was scared to death."

Eventually, five motorists were arrested for driving while intoxicated involving alcohol and another driver was arrested for driving while intoxicated involving drugs. Seven people were arrested for driving with a revoked or suspended license, one driver was cited for suspicion of driving without a license, and one driver was arrested on suspicion of not complying with an ignition-interlock restriction.

Checkpoint officers issued seven summonses: four for having no proof of insurance, two for failure to register a vehicle and one for failing to wear a seat belt.

Officers also arrested three people on suspicion of possessing a controlled substance, including two men in one vehicle. The driver, Desmond Williams, 24, of Columbia, was cited for driving with a suspended or revoked license. A search of the Williams vehicle turned up about 8 grams of individually packaged rocks of crack cocaine as well as ecstasy tablets, the sheriff’s department said. Williams was arrested on suspicion of possessing a controlled substance and possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute.

Officers also arrested the passenger in Williams’ vehicle, Trimayne Allen, 29, of Kansas City, on suspicion of possessing a controlled substance.

Most drivers stopped at Shalimar Drive did not appear too concerned about the inconvenience.

"They’re not bad. Not bad," said Ian Sutherland, 22, of Columbia, who was making his second trip through a checkpoint. "Keeps idiots off the streets."

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Wednesday, July 2, 2008

18 arrested at Kansas City DUI checkpoint


Kansas City, MO
Kansas City police made 18 arrests for driving under the influence during a sobriety checkpoint that started late Friday night.

Police stopped 792 southbound vehicles at 4040 Main St. Other violations cited at the checkpoint included one person in possession of a firearm while intoxicated, one minor in possession of alcohol, one person in possession of marijuana, two persons driving with a revoked license, and four persons for hazardous moving violations.

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

DWI sobriety checkpoint in Andrew County nets 7 arrests


St. Joseph, MO
The Missouri State Highway Patrol announced the results of a driving while intoxicated checkpoint conducted by Troop H last month.

On May 17, 15 troopers conducted a DWI checkpoint in Andrew County over a four-hour period, according to a report.

Seven citations were issued including two arrests for driving while intoxicated, two minor in possession of alcohol arrests and three driver’s license violations.

Capt. Duane L. Robinson says the sobriety checkpoints have proven to be an effective way to remove intoxicated drivers from roadways.

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