New DUI strategy: Your car won’t start
In their campaign against drunken driving, safety advocates are focusing their efforts on ignition interlock devices, which make sure drunks can’t start their cars.

Mothers Against Drunk Driving believes technology can do what state laws, public opinion and stern car-insurance penalties have not: Keep first-time drunken drivers from repeating their offenses.

While drunken-driving laws across the United States have changed radically since MADD’s founding in 1980, progress stalled in the mid-1990s.

“Initially, states focused primarily on either repeat offenders or first-time offenders who had a very high blood-alcohol content of 0.15 or 0.20,” says Anne McCartt, the senior vice president for research at the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

MADD, the IIHS and other groups were pushing hard on many fronts, encouraging police, lawmakers and courts to:

Impound and even sell convicted drunken drivers’ vehicles.
Revoke drunken drivers’ licenses for longer periods.
Toughen penalties for first-time offenders, including mandatory jail time.
Require convicted drunken drivers to use an ignition interlock device, a piece of high-tech auto equipment meant to prevent a drunken driver from operating a vehicle.
Five years ago, proponents of stiff punishment for drunken-driving offenses decided to recalibrate their approach, says Frank Harris, the state legislative affairs manager at MADD. They stepped back to see what worked.

By far the best results came from ignition interlock devices. That’s why safety advocates have recently put most of their energy into making sure drunks can’t start their cars.

An ignition interlock device is an in-car Breathalyzer. The driver blows into a device the size of a chunky mobile phone. If a measurable amount of alcohol is detected, the car simply won’t start.

You can’t drive drunk if you can’t drive
Data like these are what convince the advocates:

New Mexico’s 6-year-old law requiring ignition interlock devices for all convicted drunken drivers, including first-time offenders, is credited with a 35% reduction in drunken-driving deaths.
Arizona, with a similar law, has reduced drunken-driver deaths by 46% since 2007.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently reviewed research on interlock devices and concluded they reduce re-arrest rates by 67%. The CDC now recommends the devices for every convicted drunken driver.

Since states make the drunken-driving laws, McCartt and Harris say, the push now is to persuade every legislature to require every single person convicted of drunken driving to use an ignition interlock device for at least six continuous months.

Such laws would apply to everyone convicted of driving with a blood alcohol level of 0.08% or more. There would be no exceptions, not even for first-timers.

“From MADD’s perspective, as long as that offender is learning to drive sober and the car is not being driven drunk, then the role of the ignition airlock is effective,” says Harris.

At this point, only a small proportion of convicted drunken drivers actually end up using the devices, says the U.S. Department of Health’s Task Force on Community Preventive Services.

Even though most states use interlocks, they require them only under certain circumstances — for example, with a particularly high blood-alcohol count or on a second conviction.

Today, 14 states — Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Utah and Washington — require ignition interlock devices for every convicted drunken driver.

Car insurance won’t pay the bill
As you’d imagine, wily drivers try to fool ignition interlock devices, getting others — even children — to blow into the devices for them. They also try using canned air and other evasions.

But device makers keep improving the technology. Devices now include “running retests” — drivers are periodically required to pull to the side of the road and submit to another test within a brief time span. If a driver flunks the retest, the car keeps running — it might be dangerous to immobilize it — but the horn honks and the lights flash to summon police. (Here’s a MADD FAQ on the devices.)

You not only blow into the device but also pay for the privilege. Private companies usually provide the services. Installation can cost as much as $200, and monthly fees range from $50 to $100.

The cost of an ignition interlock device isn’t covered under your car insurance policy, which, of course, you’ll be paying more for as well. Analysis of rates pulled through CarInsurance.com’s car insurance comparison tool suggests you should expect your insurance rates to double. Surcharges for a drunken-driving conviction do vary widely from state to state and even more so from insurer to insurer.

Although makers of ignition interlocks have proposed otherwise, no insurance company offers a discount for installation of a device.

How about some old-fashioned jail time?
Despite the apparent effectiveness of interlocks, many other tactics still are in use. They include:

License suspension and jail time. In all states but Wisconsin (where it’s a traffic ticket), driving while intoxicated is a crime. Officers make 1.4 million DUI arrests each year, says MADD. Every state defines drunken driving as having a blood alcohol content of 0.08% or more. In all states and Washington, D.C., it’s illegal to buy alcohol before age 21, and the legal blood alcohol limit is lower for teens — 0.02% for drivers under 21 vs. 0.08% for those over 21.

But beyond that, penalties — and their application — diverge a lot. Some states let you refuse a Breathalyzer test please submit to having your license revoked. Some mandate jail time, even for first-time offenders, but in practice offer diversion programs with alternative penalties like community service, monitoring, treatment or license revocation.

Vehicle seizures. Some states allow communities to seize — and sometimes even sell — vehicles belonging to people convicted of driving drunk. Stiff impound fees and penalties must be paid to redeem the vehicle. But the approach isn’t catching on, Harris said, probably because exceptions — other family members need to drive, for example — make the programs difficult to enforce.

Special license plates. A few states assign special vehicle plates, or a series of license-plate numbers, to convicted drunken drivers. Ohio uses red and yellow plates different from other state licenses on vehicles that have been impounded for drunken driving. Georgia and Minnesota use special plates on a limited basis. Oregon and Iowa have experimented with similar programs that aren’t currently active. Special plates aren’t a widely used tactic. Here’s a roundup of state special license laws, from the National Conference of State Legislatures.

The bottom line, interlock advocates say, is that even when jail time is served, it doesn’t teach the convicted person how to drive sober. It is hoped that ignition interlock devices will do so.

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Patrick Sullivan, Jr., Former Arapahoe County Sheriff, Arrested For Allegedly Trading Meth For Sex

First Posted: 11/30/11 10:00 AM ET Updated: 11/30/11 11:03 AM ET

Patrick J. Sullivan Jr., a 68-year-old former Arapahoe County Sheriff, has been arrested under the suspicion that he tried to trade methamphetamine for a sexual encounter with an adult male, according to 9News.

Fox31 reports the ultimate irony that the one-time national Sheriff of the Year now sits in a jail that bears his own name — the “Patrick J. Sullivan, Jr. Detention Facility” held on a $250,000 bond.

A SWAT team raided Sullivan’s home at about 4 p.m. on Tuesday after they saw him give meth to another man. An investigation into Sullivan began only a couple of weeks ago on Nov. 17 after authorities were tipped off that he was involved in distributing and using meth, according to the Araphoe County Sheriff’s Office.


In a press release the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office said that during the investigation of Sullivan, he “had arranged to meet an adult male acquaintance and agreed to provide the male with methamphetamine in exchange for a sexual encounter.” When the transaction was to take place, Sullivan was taken into custody. The investigation was conducted by the Drug Task Force and Sheriff’s Office investigators, 7News reports.

Sullivan was a revered and respected member of the law enforcement community having serve in various branches for 40 years. His career began as a Littleton police officer and dispatcher in the 1960s. He joined the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office in the late 1970s as captain and by the early-80s he was appointed as sheriff, according to CBS4. In the 1990s he played a prominent role in the Columbine school shootings and after retiring in 2002, led the security department at Cherry Creek School District until 2008.

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Tim Masters Speaks Out About His Experience Incarcerated By The Justice System At CU Law School

The Huffington Post Andrea Rael
First Posted: 10/14/11 05:47 PM

Tim Masters, the man who spent almost a decade in prison for a murder he didn’t commit, faced an overflowing courtroom on Thursday afternoon–this time filled almost entirely with law students and sponsored by the Colorado Innocence Project.

Masters and his post-conviction attorneys Maria Liu and David Wymore held a discussion at CU’s law school focused around his imprisonment, nuanced injustices in the legal system, the importance of police and attorney work ethic, and how Masters was freed. Boulder District Attorney Stan Garnett also sat in on a portion of the discussion.

“This case really raised the question: how do you prove innocence?” said CU Law Professor Bill Nagel, who was sitting on the panel and teaches a course on post-conviction criminal procedure.

In 1987, 37-year-old Peggy Hettrick was murdered near Masters’s home in Fort Collins. Masters emerged as the only suspect and was charged with first-degree murder in 1998 despite the lack of any physical evidence linking him to the crime. Masters was not released until 2008 when DNA evidence surfaced that showed someone else, even a few people, had been with the victim.

Unknown fingerprints had been found in Hettrick’s purse, as well as unidentifiable hair on her person, evidence that is now unaccountable for and Masters said had been withheld.

The Masters case became the most famous wrongful conviction case in Colorado, resulted in the removal of judges Terry Gilmore and Jolene Blair from the bench, formally prosecutors on the case, 9-charges of perjury for Fort Collins Police official Lt. Jim Broderick, and a $10 million settlement for Masters. The case also won five of Masters’s attorneys the Colorado Trial Lawyers Association Case of the Year award this year, shortly before Masters was officially exonerated.

What made the case particularly difficult, was that after his conviction Masters’s attorneys found that police had not given his original defense team all of the documents from the investigation, known as discovery. The missing discovery plus new DNA evidence resulted in a judge’s conclusion that Masters had not been given a fair trial and overturned his conviction.

“This case wasn’t that hard,” post-conviction attorney Wymore said. “If you would have turned over that 8,000 pages of discovery…That’s a problem. When the prosecution and the court do not issue enough sanction to have a reliable trial process.”

Masters told the room that today he continues his favorite hobby, working on cars, and he will release a book sometime next year detailing the case, but that he is just happy to get on with his life.

“I had years in prison to be bitter and angry over what they had done to me,” Masters said. “And when I got out, the best revenge is to try and live as good a life as I can now. Not let them have any more of my life than they already have, you know.”

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Five cops suspended after beating mentally-disabled homeless man to death

By Edecio Martinez Topics Daily Blotter

(CBS/KCBS/AP) SANTA ANA, Calif. – Residents in Fullerton, Calif., are outraged after a mentally-disabled homeless man died following a physical confrontation with five police officers.

In surveillance video taken aboard an Orange County Transportation Authority bus, passengers say officers pounded 37-year-old Kelly Thomas’ face and hogtied him as he cried out for his father. The video was made public on Tuesday.

According to CBS station KCBS, officers confronted Thomas, who suffered from schizophrenia, on July 5 while investigating reports of a man burglarizing cars near the Fullerton Transportation Center.

Police said Thomas ran away as officers tried to search his backpack. This triggered an altercation that eventually involved six officers whose names have not been released.

One officer was initially placed on paid administrative leave. Police Chief Michael F. Sellers then decided to do the same for the other five officers on Tuesday, according to department spokesman Sgt. Andrew Goodrich.

Thomas suffered severe head and neck injuries and was taken off life support on July 10. An autopsy conducted Tuesday night was inconclusive about his cause of death.

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David Morrow, Adams County Sheriff’s Deputy, Charged With Breaking 15-Year-Old’s Jaw While Teen Was Restrained

The Huffington Post, First Posted: 7/13/11 10:07 AM ET

David Morrow, 28, an Adams County sheriff’s deputy has been charged with multiple felonies and a misdemeanor for allegedly punching a 15-year-old in the mouth and breaking his jaw.

UPDATE: Channel 7 News reports Morrow was terminated from the Adam’s County Sheriff’s Office late last week.

EARLIER:

According to the arrest affidavit Fox 31 obtained, Deputy Morrow, along with five other deputies, arrived at an Adams County, Colorado house party to break it up. The 15-year-old in question was described by officials to be highly intoxicated, uncooperative with the deputies, and eventually became “verbally abusive.”

According to The Denver Post, the teenager was restrained on an ambulance gurney and was being taken to a hospital because he would not provide information about his parents so they could be notified of his whereabouts. The sheriff and prosecutors offices describe the alleged assault:

Witnesses report that Morrow entered the ambulance to retrieve his handcuffs. As he passed the juvenile restrained on the ambulance gurney, Morrow struck the juvenile on the face with a closed fist.

Then, in an affidavit obtained by 9News, Morrow said to the paramedics:

Nobody saw anything, right?

Morrow faces criminal charges of child abuse, second-degree assault, tampering with a witness and official oppression, 9News reports.

According to 9News, Morrow turned himself into Glendale Police Tuesday. The Denver Post reports that Morrow is on leave without pay as of Tuesday because of the charges being filed and is free on a $20,000 bond.

Mulligan & Mulligan PLLC is a leading Criminal Lawyer firm serving clients in Boulder & Adams Counties Colorado. We provide aggressive defense for all felonies and misdemeanors. Call us today if you need a DUI Lawyer Boulder.

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DPD Officer Arrested In DUI Case Caught On Tape Threatening Officer

July 21, 2011 8:29 PM

Denver Police Department, Jesse Sandoval, Silverthorne

DENVER (CBS4)- A Denver police officer is caught on tape swearing, threatening and begging when he was arrested for allegedly driving under the influence in February 2010.

Silverthorne police arrested off duty Denver police officer Jesse Sandoval after a he drove his personal car off a mountain road. One police officer recorded Sandoval as he repeatedly asked for preferential treatment, urging the Silverthorne police to let him go.

“I tell you what, we take care of police when I used to work in Chicago, you suck,” said Sandoval.

Watch CBS4 Investigator Brian Maass’ report with excerpts from the recording below:

A test showed Sandoval’s blood alcohol limit was three times over the legal limit for DUI in Colorado. He was suspended for 26 days and is back on patrol for the Denver Police Department.

Sandoval was previously awarded the Denver Police Department’s Medal of Valor.

Sandoval did not respond to Maass’ repeated efforts to contact him via email.

Denver Police Officer Jesse Sandoval Requesting Preferential DUI Treatment

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Office Of The Independent Monitor Report Says Denver Police Aren’t Punishing Their Own For DUI’s

The Huffington Post First Posted: 7/14/11 04:33 PM ET

A second quarter report conducted by the agency that oversees Denver’s police force is presenting strong evidence that off-duty officers are also off the hook when it comes to getting busted for a DUI.

The Office of the Independent Monitor report said that since it has began monitoring Denver law enforcement activities in 2005, not a single person from the Denver Police Department of 1,400 has been arrested for a DUI–excepting those that also involved a traffic collision. Since 2005, ten DPD officers have been arrested for DUI in other jurisdictions while only five have been arrested in Denver and those five involved traffic collisions. Since 2000 the report says there has only been one arrest of an officer within city limits that was without a DUI-related collision.

When officers are busted for DUI’s, head of the Independent Monitor Richard Rosenthal is concerned that their punishment is also preferential. In April, Manager of Safety Charles Garcia suspended an officer for 26 days for his DUI behavior but as Rosenthal’s report and a Westword article points out, there is no current punishment or dissuasion for an officer who seeks preferential treatment.

The unnamed officer who was involved in the April incident had a blood alcohol content three times the legal limit of .08 percent, unlawful possession of a loaded firearm in the passenger compartment, and his comments were caught on the audio tape by the arresting officers as follows:

“You’re an a*****. I’ll tell you what, we take care of police. When I used to work in Chicago, we took care of each other. You suck.”

The Monitor concludes that DPD officers “expect to be treated differently than ordinary citizens during DUI-related traffic stops based on their status as police officers” and suspects that officers have received preferential treatment in the past.

The report does say that Garcia intends to create a new rule to prohibit officer solicitation for preferential treatment, but it is not yet clear how that rule would be enforced.]

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Colorado Legislature Rejects DUI-Marijuana “Per Se” Law

The Colorado Legislature recently narrowly rejected a proposed law that would have established a “per se” limit for drivers charged with driving under the influence of marijuana. Currently in Colorado, the law prohibiting DUI-marijuana—unlike the law prohibiting DUI-alcohol—does not specify a particular numerical limit above which a person is “per se” guilty of DUI. The rejected legislation would have established a “per se” limit of 5 nanograms of active THC (the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana) per milliliter of blood. The legislation, had it passed, would have enabled prosecutors to obtain convictions of drivers whose blood levels of THC were over the above limit, regardless of whether the drivers were under the influence of, or impaired by, marijuana. Since the measure failed to pass, Colorado law still requires the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a driver is either under the influence of (for DUI), or impaired by (for DWAI), marijuana in order to obtain a conviction.

This proposed legislation was based on inconclusive and contradictory research. Whether it is possible to correlate a specific level of THC in the blood with a particular degree of impairment is a hotly debated question in the forensic scientific community. Nonetheless, this legislation will return in some form during the next legislative session. Hopefully, legislators will take sufficient time to properly debate the measure, and will insist on solid scientific backing for legislation containing any proposed new limits.

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Colorado Marijuana Bill: Lawmakers Fail To Set THC Limits
The Huffington Post | Andrea Rael First Posted: 05-10-11 04:26 PM

Last month, a bill intended to set the limit for marijuana-blood content was postponed by the Senate Judiciary Committee to give it more study. Last night the Senate deliberated on the bill again, and it died on a voice vote.

As it originally stood, House Bill 1261, perhaps more widely known as the “Pot DUI Bill,” would have set the most tolerant THC limit in the country but medical marijuana advocates argued that it was still too strict. The bill would have set a THC threshold (the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana) of 5 nanograms per milliliter of blood but was amended back into deliberation in part because of a blood test submitted by William Breathes, the controversial medical marijuana critic for Westword.

In the blood test, Breathes reported that after a night of sleep and not smoking for 15 hours his THC levels nearly tripled the proposed standard. Occupational medicinal specialist Dr. Alan E. Shackleford reportedly evaluated Breathes and declared him “in no way incapacitated.”

Senator Morgan Carroll, D-Aurora, told the Denver Post:
“I don’t feel that I have enough consistent scientific information to know that I’m picking the right number.”

In a statement, Colorado Attorney General John Suthers said:
It is dumbfounding that the Colorado Senate could fail to pass a per se marijuana bill. There are approximately 125,000 Coloradans authorized by state law to use medical marijuana plus countless others who use the drug without state authorization. As the chief law enforcement officer of the state and a former district attorney, I have seen the damage people driving under the influence of drugs and alcohol can inflict. The Senate’s vote yesterday exhibited not only a lack of concern for the safety of Colorado drivers and pedestrians, but also an inability to lead.

The fact that some senators were succumbing to pressure from the marijuana industry while others may have been concerned the per-se limit was too high is no excuse for complete inaction on such a critical public safety issue. This is yet another public policy failure by the General Assembly to enact appropriate marijuana policies in Colorado.

Mulligan & Mulligan PLLC is a leading DUID Lawyer firm serving clients in Boulder & Adams Counties Colorado. We provide aggressive defense for all felonies and misdemeanors. Call us today if you need a DUID Lawyer Boulder.

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Pot DUI Bill Has Its First Hearing In Colorado Senate Monday

First Posted: 04/18/11 04:29 PM ET

A bill to define the blood-content standard for driving under the influence of marijuana will be heard today in the Colorado Senate. The bill would allow drivers to be prosecuted for having at least 5 nanograms of THC in the bloodstream — equal to the most liberal limit in the country, according to the Associated Press.

THC, or Tetrahydrocannabinol, is the psychoactive ingredient found in the cannabis plant. Twelve states have a zero-tolerance policy for driving under the influence of illegal substances, which include marijuana in those states. Three other states have DUI laws similar to the one proposed here: Pennsylvania has a five-nanogram limit for driving, while Nevada and Ohio have a THC limit of 2 nanograms.

House Bill 1261 is sponsored by Claire Levy, a Democrat from Boulder, and Mark Waller, Republican of Colorado Springs.

Read HB1261 here:

Colorado-Medical-Marijuana-Driving-Impaired-1261_01

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