Search results for category: Wisconsin DUI
Wisconsin Drunk Driver Calls 911 to Report Herself
WIS DUI charged after dispatcher instructs motorist to pull over.
A 911 dispatcher in Neilsville, Wisconsin received a phone call from a woman reporting a drunk driver. When asked if she was following the suspected impaired driver, the woman replied "I am them".
Mary Strey, 49, admitted being drunk after "drinking all night long" and was concerned about hurting someone. The dispatcher instructed her to pull over and turn on her emergency flashers. Clark County Sheriff's Chief Deputy Jim Backus said Strey was found about three miles northeast of Neilsville, in central Wisconson. Her phone call, and the fact that she had a blood alcohol content twice the legal limit, lead to charges of driving under the influence in Wisconsin.
Chief Deputy Backus said DUI self-reporting is rare.
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Peculiar drunk driving articles for the week of March 27
Really odd drunk driving news – Multiples
2 Texas DWI arrests in 15 hours – Javier Rodriguez of Brownsville was charged with driving while intoxicated in Texas after running a vehicle off the road around 2:00 am. He was released at 11:20 am after posting bond. Six hours later Rodriguez ran into the backend of a pick-up truck and rolled his car. He was charged with multiple offenses including TX DWI and intoxicated assault.
2 WV DUI arrests in – A loud exhaust drew the attention of police to a red Chevy Blazer leaving a convenience store in Cedar Grove. The officer followed the SUV and observed it speeding and crossing the centerline twice, and the driver, Scott L. Ramsey, was stopped for suspicion of driving under the influence in West Virginia. While being transported to Charleston for booking, Ramsey told the officer that he had been arrested for DUI by a Kanawha County deputy earlier in the evening and was released on bond just hours before. A background check revealed that Ramsey was convicted of drunk driving in WV in 2000, leading to the filing of a felony third offense DUI.
3 Wisconsin DUI arrests in 3 days – A 60-year old Washington woman vacationing in Wisconsin was arrested three times in three days. She was first arrested after police found her trying to drive out of a ditch. She was wearing only one shoe and registered a blood alcohol content of .21%. Just 24 hours later, the women was found stuck in the snow at a campground that was closed or the winter. She told the officer that she was "finishing up the box of wine in (her) car from yesterday." After spending 12 hours in jail, she was spotted yet again driving erratically, leading to her third charge of drunk driving in Wisconsin and a one month jail sentence.
1 driver; 1 police officer; 3 hours; 2 Idaho DUI arrests – Randy J. Reynolds was arrested for misdemeanor drunk driving in Boise, Idaho around 9:00 pm and his vehicle was left legally parked on the side of the road. That was within police policy, and usually it is the responsibility of the person arrested to have the vehicle towed or removed. After posting bond and being released from jail around 11:30 pm, Reynolds took a taxi to his pick-up truck and less than an hour later he tried to drive again. The same officer who had arrested Reynolds earlier spotted him swerving on the road and initiated another traffic stop about 12:15 am. The second ID DUI arrest led to the impoundment of Reynolds' vehicle.
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Peculiar Drunk Driving Articles for the Week of August 15, 2008
Really Odd DUI/DWI News – Sex & Nudity
Florida DUI suspect gets naked – A 34-year old Jacksonville woman is accused of hitting a bicyclist and in an attempt to escape she jumped into a car that stopped to help the victim. She then jumped into a third vehicle, throwing the driver out and tried to flee but hit her own car. She then jumped out and started running in circles, taking her clothes off. Besides driving under the influence in Florida, other charges are pending.
Tennessee DUI for naked boater - Fishermen were surprised to see a 23-foot cabin cruiser being piloted down the Cumberland River by a naked man. When told to put on his clothes, Robert DeWayne Johnson was too intoxicated to get into his shorts. Johnson, a 45-year old former handyman who married into Nashville society money, was charged with indecent exposure, boating under the influence in Tennessee and reckless and negligent operation of a boat. He has five prior arrests for drunk driving in Tennessee.
Woman offers money and sex to get out of Wisconsin DUI – Elizabeth Ann Kommes, from Iron City, Michigan, was leaving a Wisconsin Dells parking lot when she was stopped for suspicion of drunk driving. After failing a field sobriety test and being arrested, the 30-year old offered the police $10,000 and her ‘services’, including sex, if she was released. Kommes, whose license plate reads ‘TROUBLE’, had bribery of a public official added to charges of driving under the influence in Wisconsin and driving with a suspended license.
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Wisconsin DUI Penalties
The following are penalties DUI Offenders have received in the Milwaukee area:Sheboygan Wisconsin - North of Milwaukee
Operating while intoxicated
The following people were fined, had their driver's license suspended or revoked, were ordered to undergo an alcohol and other drug assessment and, in some cases, were sentenced to jail for operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated:
second offense, five days jail, $888, 12-month license revocation.
third offense, 75 days jail, $3,479, 28-month license revocation.
third offense, 30 days jail, 24-month license revocation, $1,221.
second offense, five days jail, 12-month license revocation, $906.
first offense, $730, seven-month license revocation.
first offense, $175, six-month license revocation.
local jail, forfeiture, fine $957, license revoked, ignition interlock, alcohol assessment.
local jail, forfeiture, fine $957, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
license forfeiture, fine $730, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
local jail, license forfeiture, fine $894, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
local jail, license forfeiture, fine $1078, non-probation conditions, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
probation sentence withheld, $3491, license revoked.
license forfeiture, fine $730, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
license forfeiture, fine $730, license revoked.
local jail, license forfeiture, fine $3491, license revoked, ignition interlock, alcohol assessment.
license forfeiture, fine $856, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
local jail, forfeiture, fine $953, license revoked, ignition interlock, alcohol assessment.
license forfeiture, fine $722, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
local jail, license forfeiture, fine $3491, license revoked, ignition interlock, alcohol assessment.
license forfeiture, fine $730, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
state prison, $1825, extended supervision.
license forfeiture, fine $667, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
local jail, license forfeiture, fine $1083, license revoked, alcohol assessment.
Source:
Local newspapers in the Milwaukee area
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Wisconsin Drunk Driver Rights
Traffic Stop Violated Rights of Drunken Driver, Court RulesRYAN J. FOLEY Associated Press MADISON, Wisconsin
A police officer violated the constitutional rights of a repeated drunken driver when he pulled him over for drifting in his lane, a state appeals court ruled Thursday.
The ruling may spare 12 months in jail for Robert E. Post, 42, of Poynette, who had pleaded no contest to a fifth offense of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated.
A Sauk Prairie police officer committed an unreasonable search and seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment when stopping Post in February 2004, the District 4 Court of Appeals ruled.
Post's blood alcohol content was recorded at .212, nearly three times the legal limit, and he was charged with a fifth offense of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated.
Post, 42, should never have been pulled over even though he had drifted "from the right part of his lane toward the left side of his lane and back several times," the court said. Post stayed in his lane and did not speed, drive erratically or commit any other traffic violations, the appeals court noted.
"Based on the officer's testimony, we conclude that the police did not have a reasonable suspicion that Post was violating the law that would justify a traffic stop," the court said. "Post's slight deviations within one lane of travel, with nothing more, does not, in our view, reach that quantum of evidence necessary to make the officer's hunch that Post might be intoxicated reasonable under the Fourth Amendment."
Post had pleaded no contest to the charge last year and was sentenced to one year in jail. However, the sentence was stayed pending the outcome of his appeal.
Post's lawyer, T. Christopher Kelly, said the decision means the police cannot use any evidence gathered during the traffic stop against his client. He said he believed prosecutors would likely be forced to drop the charges.
"All this decision says is you can't pull somebody over for normal driving. You've got to see bad driving," he said. "I think it was an easy call because we don't want the police pulling people over without having a good reason."
Kevin Calkins, a Sauk County prosecutor who handled the case, did not immediately return a phone message.
Source: http://www.duluthsuperior.com
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Wisconsin Moves to Make First DUI a Crime
Wisconsin Moves to Make First DUI Arrest a Crime
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