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        <title>dui.com - Florida DUI Defense Attorney Completes National Symposium</title>
        <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/florida-dui-defense-attorney-completes-national-symposium</link>
        <description>Florida DUI Defense Attorney Completes National Symposium.</description>
        <language>en-us</language>
        <generator>Plone 2.0</generator>

        
            
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                      <title>Drivers Help Stop Florida DUI Suspect</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/drivers-help-stop-florida-dui-suspect</link>
                      <description>Woman led Good Samaritans on route through Port Richey</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Sun, 28 Mar 2010 09:58:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>Just past midnight, in the early minutes of Tuesday morning, a Florida woman driving northbound hit a median and went airborne, crashed through a traffic sign and ended up in southbound traffic lanes. The driver continued on as if nothing happened, heading directly into oncoming traffic. Witnesses called 911 and some drivers began following her.</p>

<p>The woman, identified as Sharon E. Dizon, pulled into a parking lot where the other motorists confronted her. She was asked to turn off her car and she instead turned off her headlights. She then drove off. Her pursuers watch her hit the curb a few times as she drove two miles without her headlights. When she eventually drifted into another parking lot, at least three other vehicles blocked her in.</p>

<p>A Florida Highway Patrol trooper reported that as he arrived on the scene, the Good Samaritans were still trying to get Dizon to turn off her car and surrender her keys. When she saw the trooper she shut off the ignition and threw her keys into the hole of the missing car stereo.</p>

<p>As Dizon exited the vehicle she was unable to stand without leaning on the car door. She told the officer that she was looking for her boyfriend. When asked if she knew she had hit the median, she said, "I didn’t mean to. It just happens sometimes."</p>

<p>After being placed under arrest for Florida DUI, Dizon slipped out of her handcuffs twice before having her wrists restrained with plastic leg ties. When told not to try to get out of her restraints, she replied, "I don’t know what I’m doing right now. I have a lot going on in my mind." En route to Pasco County Jail she screamed, cried and yelled obscenities, finally exclaiming that she couldn’t believe the cop was taking her to jail because she was "(bleeping) detoxing".</p>

<p>Dizon refused to submit to a chemical test for blood alcohol content and drugs. She was charged with driving under the influence in Florida and resisting arrest. She was released from jail around 9:45 Tuesday morning.</p>

<p>Were you charged with <a href="http://www.dui.com/florida/pasco">DUI in Pasco County, FL</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Pasco County Deputy Avoids Florida DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/pasco-county-deputy-avoids-florida-dui</link>
                      <description>Off-duty deputy was allowed to go home despite suspicion of drunk driving.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Mon, 29 Sep 2008 08:51:08 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>John Daniels, a Pinellas County Florida deputy, was on patrol around 1:00 am when he witnessed a car pass him at a high rate of speed. His radar indicated the vehicle was going 98 in a 45 mph zone. After turning around and giving pursuit, the deputy found the vehicle stopped 20 yards from an intersection with the front passenger outside the vehicle urinating.</p>

<p>Daniels approached the driver, Jose Berrios, and requested driver’s license, proof of insurance and registration. Berrios then identified himself and his passenger as Pasco County deputies. Daniels noted the presence of alcohol and the Pasco County deputies admitted to having consumed “approximately one or two drinks”. Daniels asked Berrios to submit to a breath test to check blood alcohol content, saying if he passed he could drive home and if he failed he could call someone to pick him up. Berrios countered with a request to just call someone for a ride and not submit to the test, which Daniels agreed to.</p>

<p>Instead of a charge of suspicion of driving under the influence in Florida, Daniels’ report of the incident ends with “Disposition: Case closed, solved non-criminal.” A Pinellas County Sheriff’s Department spokesperson said the incident is being reviewed. A spokesperson with the Pasco County Sheriff’s Department also indicated that the deputies involved are under investigation.</p>

<p>Are you looking for a <a href="http://www.dui.com/florida/pinellas">Pinellas County, FL DUI Attorney</a> or <a href="http://www.dui.com/florida/pasco">Pasco County, FL DUI Lawyer</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>MADD Volunteers to Look For Florida DUI Offenders</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/madd-volunteers-to-look-for-florida-dui-offenders</link>
                      <description>Program calls for MADD observers to help police spot drunk drivers in Florida.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Sep 2008 10:09:52 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>Mothers Against Drunk Driving has announced a program they developed that calls for partnerships with law enforcement to report potential drunk drivers. Called a ‘first in the nation’, MADD will work with the Manatee County Florida Sheriff’s Department to test the program.</p>

<p>MADD calls the initiative ‘TOP’ or Traffic Observation Program. It calls for teams of two trained observers to travel the roads looking for signs of possible Florida DUI offenses. When they spot suspected drunk drivers, the teams will contact the Manatee County Sheriff’s Department. The observers will be in personal, unmarked vehicles using their own cell phones.</p>

<p>‘TOP’ will be initiated over the Labor Day weekend and continued every weekend and on some weeknights for six months, after which the Florida pilot program will be evaluated. MADD has said it will be collecting its own data on response times, percentage of arrests and the ratio of observations to interceptions. There is no indication the citizen action will report the accuracy of their observations in terms of false arrests or unwarranted traffic stops.</p>

<p>A MADD spokesperson said they are “only doing what every citizen could and should do.”</p>

<p>Have you been arrested for <a href="http://www.dui.com/florida">Florida DUI</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Florida DUI Defense Attorney Completes National Symposium</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/florida-dui-defense-attorney-completes-national-symposium</link>
                      <description>Florida DUI Defense Attorney Completes National Symposium.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Aug 2008 10:23:27 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>DUI Defense lawyer Gerald Roden recently completed a three day event conducted by the National College of DUI Defense. Held at the Harvard Law School, the continuing legal education symposium taught advanced skills to attorneys who limit their practices to DUI defense.</p>

<p>Topics at this year’s event included identifying problems with breath testing equipment, emerging trial strategies and reviewing recent court decisions.</p>

<p>Gerald Roden is a member of DUI.com | DWI.com. He defends cases of driving under the influence on Treasure Coast and Space Coast, Florida. Mr. Roden has offices Stuart, Fort Pierce, Melbourne and Vero Beach, Florida.</p>

<p>Do you need to hire a <a href="http://www.dui.com/florida/st.-lucie">FL DUI Lawyer in Fort Pierce, Florida</a> or surrounding areas?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Equipment Inspections Issue Could Impact Florida DUI Cases</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/equipment-inspections-issue-could-impact-florida-dui-cases</link>
                      <description>Procedures not followed in handling of breath test equipment.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Wed, 30 Jul 2008 15:52:40 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>An Escambia County judge ruled that breath test results from 19 Florida DUI cases could not be entered into evidence. The Intoxilyzer 8000 used to determine the defendants’ blood alcohol content had not been properly handled and maintained, which could have altered the test results.</p>

<p>The equipment in question registered problems while testing breath samples in the county jail. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement is responsible for maintenance, calibration and records keeping for the breath testing equipment, and the regional alcohol-program director for FDLE took the machine from the jail to her office to see if environmental issues were causing the error messages. The Intoxilyzer 8000 can give false high readings if the air around the machine is heavy with alcohol or the breathing tube contains residual alcohol. Temperature can also affect the test reading.  When the equipment worked in her office, she returned it to the jail with instructions to keep the door open to the holding area for air circulation. A fan was also placed in the room.</p>

<p>According to the FDLE’s own rules, whenever breath test equipment is removed for repair or inspection, it must be recertified. Because that did not happen, the judge ruled that the results gathered from the equipment between February 17 and May 17 could be compromised.</p>
 
<p>The cases of driving under the influence in Florida will still proceed, though prosecutors must make their case without the breath test results.</p>

<p>If you have been arrested for DUI in FL, you will need to hire a <a href="http://www.dui.com/florida">Florida DUI Attorney</a>.</p>]]>
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                      <title>Sheriff’s Office Employee Avoids Florida DUI in Brooksville</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/sheriff2019s-office-employee-avoids-florida-dui-in-brooksville</link>
                      <description>No drunk driving charge for finance director because she was not seen behind wheel of truck.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 17 Jul 2008 21:26:36 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>Two witnesses chased but could not keep up with a speeding pick-up truck as it ran cars off the road and even slid through a highway intersection and briefly stopped in a ditch. After briefly losing sight of the truck, the concerned motorists finally caught up to it and found a crumpled street sign, the vehicle on the side of the road and the presumed driver outside the vehicle looking at the bumper.</p>

<p>The woman looking at the truck was Emily Vernon, the finance director for the Hernando County Sheriff’s Office. She got back in the truck before surrendering her keys to one of her chasers, tumbled into a nearby ditch and danced in the road. Police arriving on the scene found two wine carafes, one empty, in the truck, and detected a faint odor of alcohol. Even though Vernon admitted to having consumed half a bottle of wine and to have taken sleeping medication an hour before the accident, police elected not to charge Vernon with driving under the influence in Florida because no witness could confirm that she had been behind the wheel. In the police report, an officer on the scene said that a DUI with property damage was not advisable because there were no accident witnesses.</p>

<p>A sheriff’s supervisor agreed, stating that with no ‘wheel witness’ a case of drunk driving in Hernando County would be difficult to prove in the courtroom. Instead, Vernon, 39, was charged with a single car collision.</p>

<p>She does however still face an internal affairs investigation.</p>

<p>If you have been charged with a Florida DUI in Hernando County you need to hire a <a href="http://www.dui.com/florida/hernando">Hernando County, FL DUI attorney</a>.</p>]]>
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                      <title>Florida DUI Case With ‘No Driver’ Is Reopened</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/florida-dui-case-with-2018no-driver2019-is-reopened</link>
                      <description>Case of drunk driving in Manatee County reopened after new witnesses come forward.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 17 Jul 2008 21:08:24 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>Last weekend, the finance director for the Manatee County sheriff’s department was involved in a single car accident. Emily Vernon was clearly intoxicated yet not charged with driving under the influence in Florida because no witness could place her behind the wheel of the vehicle at the time of the accident. Investigators have decided to reopen the case after two new witnesses described details of the scene.</p>

<p>The couple was stopped at an intersection when they saw Vernon’s truck strike a metal road sign and nearly hit them. In the vehicle headlights they witnessed Vernon exit her vehicle and examine the front tires and grill. They then saw two motorists who had been chasing Vernon drive up, and thinking all was under control, left the scene.</p>

<p>Vernon admitted to having consumed alcohol prior to the crash though police did not levy drunk driving charges because there was no ‘wheel witness’ to say that she was actually in physical control of the truck at the time of the accident.</p>

<p>Even with the new witnesses, Manatee County drunk driving defense attorneys say the case will be difficult to prove in a court of law. Filing DUI charges days after an event is unheard of and the law stipulates that a DUI has to occur in an officer’s presence. Evidence was not collected or preserved and no field sobriety tests were conducted. Vernon is also protected by the Florida Accident Report Privilege which states that any information provided by a motorist is immune from penalty until the officer officially declares a DUI criminal investigation.</p>
 
<p>Vernon, 39, has declined to comment on the case.</p>

<p>Do you need a <a href="http;//www.dui.com/florida/manatee">Manatee County, FL DUI Lawyer</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Florida Driving Record</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/florida-driving-record</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>DUI Related</category>
     
     
        <category>Florida DUI</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          Q: How can I get a copy of my driving record? 

                          <p>A: This information is not available via the internet. However, it may
                          be available from private vendors. To obtain a copy of a driving record
                          from the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, you can submit
                          a written request which includes your full name, date of birth, social
                          security number, Florida driver license number (if available) and the
                          address where the record is to be sent, along with the appropriate fee
                          to:</p>

                          <p>Bureau of Records<br />
                           P.O. Box 5775<br />
                           Tallahassee, Florida 32314-5775</p>

                          <p>If you wish to use express mail, you should send your request to:</p>

                          <p>Bureau of Records<br />
                           2900 Apalachee Parkway, MS 90<br />
                           Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0575.</p>

                          <p>Cost for these records:<br />
                           $2.10 3-year $3.10 7-year (complete)<br />
                           $3.10 3-year or 7-year (certified)</p>

                          <p>You may pay by personal check or money order made payable to the
                          Division of Driver Licenses.</p>
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                      <title>Bumper Stickers for DUI Offenders</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/dui-bumper-stickers</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>DUI Related</category>
     
     
        <category>Florida DUI</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          Bumper Stickers Ordered for Drunk Drivers 

                          <p>Posted on Wed, Sep. 24, 2003</p>

                          <p>Associated Press</p>

                          <p>PENSACOLA, Fla. - Some motorists convicted of drunken driving may have
                          to wear it on the bumper.</p>

                          <p>A judge in Florida is ordering some of the convicted offenders to
                          place bumper stickers on their cars that ask "How's my driving?" followed
                          by a toll-free telephone number.</p>

                          <p>The stickers ends with the statement "The judge wants to know!!!"</p>

                          <p>Escambia County Judge William White said he hopes the bumper stickers,
                          which include an identification number for each driver, will reduce
                          repeat offenses for driving under the influence of alcohol.</p>

                          <p>"We want to influence people to correct their behavior rather than
                          just use this as sort of a monitoring system," White said.</p>

                          <p>White said he tried to use bumper stickers saying only "Convicted DUI"
                          in the past simply to shame violators. He hopes the call-in stickers will
                          be a stronger deterrent.</p>

                          <p>In late August he began ordering motorists convicted of drunken
                          driving to pay an annual fee of $50 to enroll in the monitoring system
                          offered by the I Saw You Safety and Scholarship Foundation as a condition
                          of probation.</p>

                          <p>The Pensacola-based foundation provides the same service to parents of
                          teenage drivers, borrowing the idea from trucking companies that use
                          similar stickers to monitor their drivers.</p>

                          <p>I See You plans to donate half of its enrollment fees to scholarships
                          for victims of drunken drivers.</p>

                          <p>The program has been approved for the 1st Judicial Circuit, which
                          covers four counties in the Florida Panhandle, and some other judges are
                          beginning to use it, foundation spokesman David Richbourg said Monday. He
                          said legislation also is being sought to make the program mandatory
                          across the state, but critics have questioned the tactic.</p>

                          <p>"I see this as providing very little deterrent," Pensacola lawyer
                          Richard Alvoid said. "Punishment should be enough rather than also
                          shaming people."</p>

                          <p>University of West Florida student David Blume agrees.</p>

                          <p>"It's like a scarlet letter," Blume said. "If you know you could go to
                          jail from drunk driving, I don't see why a bumper sticker would be more
                          of a deterrent."</p>

                          <p>White said embarrassment "comes with the turf when you're committing
                          crimes."</p>

                          <p>Doug Meyers, an insurance adjuster from nearby Pace, said the shame is
                          worth it if prevents traffic deaths.</p>

                          <p>"If people are embarrassed, they shouldn't drink and drive," Meyers
                          said.</p>

                          <p align="center">
                          ----------------------------------------------------------------------</p>

                          <p>Offenders Tagged with DUI Stickers</p>

                          <p>Others Can Call, Report Driving to Monitors</p>

                          <p>Published Monday, September 22, 2003</p>

                          <p>By Gina Pace</p>

                          <p>News Journal Correspondent</p>

                          <p>An Escambia County judge is using a dose of public shame to help keep
                          drunken drivers off the roads.</p>

                          <p>Judge William White routinely is requiring those convicted of driving
                          under the influence to attach a red and yellow bumper sticker that reads:
                          "How is my driving? Call Toll-Free 1-866-I- SAW-YOU The Judge wants to
                          know!!!"</p>

                          <p>He hopes it will reduce repeat offenses and ultimately reduce the
                          number of DUIs.</p>

                          <p>"I am open to new ideas that might assist in reducing the number of
                          DUIs and recidivism," White said. "We want to influence people to correct
                          their behavior rather than just use this as a sort of monitoring
                          system."</p>

                          <p>The service is operated by the I Saw You Safety and Scholarship
                          Foundation, a Pensacola-based organization. The foundation monitors calls
                          to the toll-free number from the public and notifies law enforcement if
                          necessary.</p>

                          <p>"Bumper stickers asking about driving have reduced accidents in
                          commercial trucking by 50 percent," said David Richbourg, the
                          foundation's director of marketing and media relations. `'We created a
                          program for teen drivers, and we have come up with other applications for
                          our monitoring service, such as impaired drivers."</p>

                          <p>White tried using bumper stickers in the past but said they were
                          problematic because there was no monitoring system, and the old stickers
                          read "Convicted DUI." The new bumper stickers could be used for other
                          driving, alcohol or drug offenses. However, since White started using I
                          SAW YOU stickers in late August, they have been issued only in DUI cases
                          as a condition of parole.</p>

                          <p>White is the only judge using the decals. Kim Skievaski, chief judge
                          of the First Judicial Circuit, approved the decals for use as a
                          sentencing tool.</p>

                          <p>Offenders must pay $50 per year that they are enrolled in the decal
                          program. Usual probation periods for DUIs last for six months to one
                          year. Decals must be placed on all household cars.</p>

                          <p>The safety foundation plans to donate half of enrollment fees to
                          scholarships for victims of drunken driving.</p>

                          <p>Jerry Fifer, a member of Mothers Against Drunk Driving and a victim of
                          a drunken driving accident, fully supports the initiative.</p>

                          <p>"I think it's a great deterrent once people realize it is going to get
                          smacked on their cars," he said. "I spoke at Pace High School and showed
                          the bumper sticker, and one student said, `Mom or Dad better not get one
                          because it would end up on my car.' It will help if people in families
                          are pressuring each other not to drink and drive."</p>

                          <p>But other think the stickers cast an unnecessary stigma on the person
                          driving.</p>

                          <p>"I see this as providing very little deterrent," said Pensacola
                          attorney Richard Alvoid. "Punishment should be enough rather than also
                          shaming people."</p>

                          <p>University of West Florida student David Blume agrees.</p>

                          <p>"It's like a scarlet letter," Blume said. "If you know you could go to
                          jail for drunk driving, I don't see why a bumper sticker would be more of
                          a deterrent."</p>

                          <p>White thinks that embarrassment "comes with the turf when you're
                          committing crimes."</p>

                          <p>"If it's a wholly distasteful experience, they may make the decision
                          that they won't do this again," he said.</p>

                          <p>Doug Meyers, an independent insurance adjuster from Pace, thinks the
                          shame those convicted would face is worth it if the policy can prevent
                          fatalities.</p>

                          <p>"If people are embarrassed, they shouldn't drink and drive," he
                          said.</p>

                          <p>White said the sticker program is worth an experiment.</p>

                          <p>"This doesn't cost a lot. It's embarrassing, but if it results in a
                          few lives saved, it is pretty minimal," White said. "Maybe one of these
                          days we'll find something that will be a solution."</p>
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                      <title>Florida DUI Instructor Found Driving Drunk and Half-Naked</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/florida/related/florida-dui-instuctor-found-drunk</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Fri, 28 Jul 2006 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>Florida DUI</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[<font size="2">
<div>Last December Officer Laurie Primeau, a police academy DUI instructor, was stopped by the <a href="http://www.ocso.com/Default.aspx">Orange County Sheriff's Department</a> on Florida&rsquo;s Turnpike. She was <strong>driving drunk</strong>, speeding at 90 mph, and naked from the </div>
<div>waist down.</div>
<div></div>
<br />
<div>Primeau, 47, is with the <a href="http://www.psd.plantation.org/traffic-unit.html">Plantation Florida Police Department</a>, located in south Florida. When stopped she was over 200 miles north near Orlando.</div>
<div></div>
<br />
<div>In a recently released Plantation Police Department Internal Affairs report it was noted that Officer Primeau has been suspended without pay until August. She has been with the department for nearly 27 years, was the 1994 Plantation Officer of the Year and received a Distinguished Performance Award in 2004.</div>
<div></div>
<br />
<div>The report states she was stopped after swerving into the lane of Orange County Deputy David Alvarado and, in his words, &quot;almost collided&quot; with him.</div>
<div></div>
<br />
<div>After stopping Primeau, Deputy Alvarado asked &quot;Where are your pants?&quot; He told investigators he thinks she answered, &quot;I don't know.&quot; Alvarado said he asked for backup because &quot;I didn't want to be alone too long with a naked female on the side of the road.&quot; After being asked again about her pants, Primeau reached for her sweat pants and put them on.</div>
<div></div>
<br />
<div>A large open bottle of Southern Comfort was found in Primeau&rsquo;s car, which her attorney later argued was used for police academy recruit training.</div>
<div></div>
<br />
<div>According to the report she <strong>refused a Breathalyzer test</strong> <strong>but failed roadside sobriety exercises</strong>. Orange County Animal Control was called to take custody of two dogs in her car while she was taken to jail. She stayed in jail for five days until arranging for bail.</div>
<div></div>
<br />
<div>A jury found Primeau guilty of <strong>drunken driving</strong> in January during a criminal trial in Orange County. She was given a speeding ticket, fined $647 and sentenced to 50 hours of community service. Her <strong>driver's license was suspended</strong> for 180 days, and she was put on a period of <strong>probation</strong>.</div>
<div></div>
<br />
<div>Primeau was re-assigned to a dispatch unit and performed odd jobs in the communications department after returning to work with the Plantation police department. She was suspended from the department last June though she is due to return to road patrol work in August.</div>
<div></div>
<br />
<div>Police Chief Larry Massey, wrote to Primeau, &quot;there will be no second chances.&quot; If she violates department policy or engages in drunken driving again, the chief told her, she will be terminated. Primeau has apologized to the department for having &quot;tarnished the badge and ... humiliated everybody here.&quot;</div>
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