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DPS Suspends Breath Test Contractor Over False Inspections PDF Print E-mail

Courtesy of KBMT12.com

The Texas Department of Public Safety has suspended the certification of an independent contractor who supervised breath alcohol tests for eight law enforcement agencies in the Houston area.

During a routine audit, DPS breath test employees found that electronic records had been altered to make it appear that the technical supervisor had inspected breath test instruments in several locations when the contractor had not in fact examined them to ensure that the calibrations were accurate.

"Once DPS found reason to believe that these records had been altered, we suspended the supervisor's certification and opened up a criminal investigation by the Texas Rangers. We will take other actions as appropriate," said Col. Stan Clark, interim director of the DPS. "These are serious allegations and we will not tolerate any activities that call into question the integrity of the breath test system. I want to emphasize that DPS discovered these irregularities and took immediate action."

The DPS Forensic Breath Alcohol Laboratory regulates the state's breath alcohol testing program. The tests are used to determine the concentration of alcohol in a person's breath, and are used in prosecution of alcohol-related offenses such as driving while intoxicated. Technical supervisors-those who work for DPS and those who are hired by police agencies-are required to inspect each breath test instrument in person at least once per month.

DPS officials believe that the contractor had been falsifying records for up to a year and that at least 2,600 DWI cases could be affected by the falsified inspections. The breath test devices were located at the Clute Police Department, the Friendswood Police Department, the Galveston Police Department, the League City Police Department, the Pearland Police Department, the Seabrook Police Department, the South Houston Police Department and the Webster Police Department.

DPS Breath Test Program officials met with law enforcement agencies and prosecutors in Harris, Galveston and Brazoria counties on Friday to implement appropriate actions.

The Forensic Breath Alcohol Laboratory manages the Department's technical supervisors and administratively manages technical supervisors employed by other agencies. The laboratory has certified 380 breath testing instrument locations and 5,600 breath test operators. The laboratory also provides expert testimony as needed in contested criminal, civil and administrative breath test cases.



 
Texas Becomes Roadblock Battleground PDF Print E-mail

Interest groups battle over roadblocks ahead of the 2009 Texas legislative session.

Original Article Courtesy of theNewspaper.com

UpstateDUI.com comment: "More random "seizures" coming to Texas..."

Interest groups are pressuring Texas lawmakers to authorize the use of roadblocks ahead of their return for the 2009 legislative session. The practice of setting up barricades on roads to stop and interrogate motorists suspected of no wrongdoing has been unlawful since a 1994 state appeals court decision ruled that a "politically accountable governing body at the state level" must first approve their use. Now Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott has scheduled an October 23 deadline for briefs to decide the Texas Public Safety Commission's request to bypass this requirement and approve roadblocks on its own authority.

Texas is one of fewer than a dozen states that currently prohibit warrantless searches of motorists. For that reason, the new president of Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), Laura Dean-Mooney, made convincing the Texas legislature of the need for roadblocks a high priority for her organization.

"I have a special place in my heart for Texas," Mooney said upon taking the top job in July. "But so much more must be done. Passing interlocks for all drunk driving offenders and sobriety checkpoints to deter drunk driving would be a great start."

MADD came close to a legislative victory in April 2007 when the state Senate voted unanimously to establish the waterborne equivalent of a roadblock. The proposed "boating safety checkpoints" would have allowed police to pull over and question all recreational boaters on lakes within the state. The legislation would also have given police the discretion to use force to take a boater's blood to determine sobriety. The measure died when the state House declined to act on the bill.

The alcoholic beverage industry feels threatened by the chilling effect such draconian measures would have on sales of beer and wine at restaurants.

"By calling for roadblocks and mandating breathalyzers for first time offenders, regardless of their BAC level, MADD is ignoring the root cause of today's drunk driving problem -- hard core alcohol abusers," American Beverage Institute Managing Director Sarah Longwell said. "Because they are highly visible by design and publicized in advance, roadblocks are all too easily avoided by the chronic alcohol abusers who comprise the core of today's drunk driving problem. That leaves adults who enjoyed a glass of wine with dinner, a beer at a ball game, or a champagne toast at a wedding to be harassed at checkpoints."

The possibility of innocent drivers being arrested at such checkpoints is increased by a state police policy that gives troopers an incentive to accuse motorists of drunk driving. In a June meeting of the Public Safety Commission, a twenty-seven year veteran of the state police testified about drunk driving (DWI) arrest quotas.

"Also, my second item, some of the troopers that have earned vacation and putting in requests for vacation are being told that their vacation request will not be considered unless they are getting a certain amount of DWIs," retired Trooper Coy Lorance testified.

The commission responded by attempting to get around the prohibition on drunk driving roadblocks by referring to them as "license checks." The group put in the request to the attorney general last month after receiving an inconvenient response from the state police chief.

"Mr. Chairman, you had asked at the meeting prior to... prepare a document that would relate the legal responses to conducting driver's license, registration, and insurance checkpoints," Department of Public Safety Director Thomas Davis testified in June. "I think it's the recommendation of general counsel that without the authority being granted by a governance is that we're not able to do that legally."

In a 2005 decision, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court found that 99.29 percent of drivers stopped at state roadblocks were innocent. The results also showed that it took 53 percent more effort to make an arrest with a roadblock than to use traditional roving patrol techniques. Nonetheless, the court upheld the validity of roadblocks (view ruling).

The request letter sent to the attorney general is available in a 170k PDF file at the source link below.

Source: Request for Attorney General Opinion (Texas Department of Public Safety, 10/6/2008)



 
Halloween Weekend: No Refusals On DWI Tests PDF Print E-mail

 

The disappearing Constitution...

Courtesy of KVUE.com

If you drink and drive Halloween weekend, police say they will get proof through breath or blood.  It's an offer you can't refuse.

Even before a costume is chosen, the Halloween plans are in place.

"I’m probably going to hit up 6th street," shopper Judith Poe said.

"It should be a big group, really fun weekend," said another shopper, Jason Kirklen.

Last year, tens of thousands packed the streets of Downtown Austin. This year will be no exception.

But no matter where the party is, -one thing people won't be able to disguise this Halloween weekend:  how much they've had to drink.

"We are going to have a no refusal weekend," said APD Chief Art Acevedo.

Chief Acevedo announced Friday that if you are pulled over for drinking and driving and refuse a breath or blood test, officers will quickly get a search warrant for your blood.  Friday through Sunday, a phlebotomist will be on duty in the department's BAT (Blood Alcohol Testing) mobile.

"Drink all you want, but if you drink excessively and drive you can be sure the APD will do everything in its power to save you from hurting somebody and to hold you accountable," said Acevedo.

According to Acevedo, half of the nation's traffic fatalities are due to drinking and driving. He hopes this program will send a message.

Not everyone agrees with the department's plans--but they won't let alcohol ruin their night.

"I think the best thing is for everyone to just not drive. Have a designated driver or put 40 bucks away for a cab," Kirklen said.

Chief Acevedo says he will continue to use this program during dangerous weekends.



 
Man Killed In Romania By Drunken Horse PDF Print E-mail

 

And we thought US laws were tough...

Courtesy of RIA Novosti

MOSCOW, October 14 (RIA Novosti) - Traffic police tested a horse for being over the alcohol limit after it went out of control and killed an elderly man in the southwestern Romanian county of Gorj, the Ananova news agency said on Tuesday.

Police made the unusual request after an 86-year-old-man died from injuries sustained when he was hit by a cart, which was being pulled by a horse that "looked out of control."

Ion Iliuta, head of the local veterinary authority, said: "We never had such a request before. Maybe to see what kind of blood it is, yes, but to find out if the animal was drunk, never."

The blood test came back positive.

The 56-year-old owner said he was returning home after having bought the horse earlier at a fair.

Police believe the horse was given alcohol to make it appear stronger and healthier.



 



Only time will tell if this new legislation achieves the balance it appears to seek.

Attorney Steve W. Sumner
Greenville News - Article about DUI Reform Law