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        <title>dui.com - Georgia Drunk Driving Articles</title>
        <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia</link>
        <description>Georgia Drunk Driving Articles, News and Information.</description>
        <language>en-us</language>
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                      <title>Cobb County Officer Arrested for Georgia DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/related/cobb-county-officer-arrested-for-georgia-dui</link>
                      <description>Officer involved in hit and run accident while driving drunk.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 12 Nov 2009 08:54:11 -0600</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>Lt. Robert McGee, with the Cobb County Police Department, was charged with driving under the influence in Georgia after he was in a hit and run accident. The accident occurred on October 26 at Chastain Road and George Busbee Parkway in Kennesaw.</p>

<p>McGee turned himself in and was booked at the Cobb County Adult Detention Center on charges of GA DUI, hit and run and following too closely.</p>

<p>Have you been arrested for <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia/cobb">DUI in Cobb County, GA</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Sunday Beer Run Leads to Georgia DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/news/sunday-beer-run-leads-to-georgia-dui</link>
                      <description>Suspect racks up several crimes in Cherokee County.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Fri, 18 Sep 2009 17:40:25 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>Robert Keefer Dell walked into a convenience store in Canton Georgia to purchase a six-pack of Michelob beer. Sales of alcoholic beverages are not allowed on Sunday though that did not stop Dell from ripping the neon orange tape stretched across the coolers and grabbing the beer. The clerk tried to stop him, explaining to his regular customer that he would get in trouble if he sold him the beer. Dell responded by placing $6 on the counter and walking out of the store. When the clerk followed him, things went from simple shoplifting to an escalating series of crimes.</p>

<p>Dell lifted his shirt to reveal a handgun in his waistband. That made the offense an armed robbery, a felony in Georgia. Dell then fled into the neighboring county where he led Georgia State Patrol and Pickens County deputies on a chase. Dell struck one patrol car and attempted to run over an officer. He was eventually stopped when officers rammed his truck.</p>

<p>Dell was booked at the Pickens County jail on charges of fleeing police, aggravated assault and driving under the influence in Georgia. He also faces a warrant for armed robbery in Cherokee County.</p>

<p>The store clerk said he thought something was wrong when Dell stumbled around the store and grabbed the Michelob instead of his usual Natural Ice. Dell also didn't put down enough money for the $8.99 six-pack of Michelob.</p>

<p>Have you been arrested for <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia/cherokee">DUI in Cherokee County, GA</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Police Officer Charged with Georgia DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/news/police-officer-charged-with-georgia-dui</link>
                      <description>Officer arrested for drunk driving in Gwinnett County after accident.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Fri, 18 Sep 2009 16:47:31 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>A Gwinnett County police officer was charged with driving under the influence in GA early Saturday morning following a minor accident. Around 1:15 am, James Stoudenmire ran his 2006 Ford Mustang into the back of a vehicle stopped at a red light. The responding officers detected alcohol on Stoudenmire’s breath and reported that he was unsteady during field sobriety tests.</p>

<p>Stoudenmire, who was off-duty, said that he had consumed four drinks, starting at 4:00 pm Friday. He was charged with Georgia DUI and for following a vehicle too closely. While being booked, Stoudenmire stumbled and fell against the wall across from the holding cell.</p>

<p>A passenger in the other vehicle received minor leg injuries and was treated and released at the scene.</p>

<p>Stoudenmire, 27, had been placed on administrative leave. When the department's Professional Standards Unit recommended termination, Stoudenmire decided on Wednesday to submit his resignation. He was a four year veteran with the Gwinnett County police department.</p>

<p>Are you trying to find a <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia/gwinnett">Gwinnett County, GA DUI attorney</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Georgia DUI Charges Against NASCAR Team Owner Dropped</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/news/georgia-dui-charges-against-nascar-team-owner-dropped</link>
                      <description>Billy Ballew had been arrested for drunk driving in Atlanta before a race.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Fri, 03 Apr 2009 09:39:52 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>The Henry County Solicitor elected to drop the charges against NASCAR team owner Billy Bellew. Ballew was stopped on the Atlanta Motor Speedway grounds last March by a Henry County sheriff’s deputy. The officer spotted a mixed drink in the vehicle and, after Ballew refused to submit to a breath test, an arrest for driving under the influence in Georgia was initiated.</p>

<p>The county solicitor elected not to press GA DUI charges after learning that Ballew had not been driving erratically and the deputy did not indicate that he had detected alcohol. The solicitor indicated there was not enough evidence to justify the traffic stop.</p>

<p>Are you looking for a <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia">GA DUI lawyer</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>NASCAR Team Owner Charged with Georgia DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/news/nascar-team-owner-charged-with-georgia-dui</link>
                      <description>Billy Ballew was on the Atlanta Motor Speedway grounds with a mixed drink in his car at the time of the GA drunk driving arrest.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Fri, 06 Mar 2009 10:04:31 -0600</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>NASCAR team owner Billy Ballew was arrested for driving under the influence at Atlanta Motor Speedway. He was driving a friend from his condo to the passenger's motor home when he was stopped. Both the condo and the motor home are on the property of the Atlanta Motor Speedway. Ballew acknowledged that he had a mixed drink in his vehicle and then refused to submit to a breath test.</p>

<p>The Henry County Sheriff’s Department reported that the officer arrested Ballew around 7:45 Wednesday night. Ballew was booked at county jail on charges of drunk driving in Georgia. Ballew strongly contests the arrest, saying the officer was “an irate cop” wearing a 'Security' cap.</p>

<p>A former stock car driver and team owner in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Ballew is well known in truck racing circles. He has used a series of high-profile drivers over the years, including John Andretti, Kyle Busch, Geoffrey Bodine and Martin Truex Jr.</p>

<p>Have you been charged with <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia">drunk driving in GA</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Head of University of Georgia Math Department Has GA DUI Dismissed</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/related/head-of-university-of-georgia-math-department-has-ga-dui-dismissed</link>
                      <description>Joseph Fu had been arrested for drunk driving even though his blood alcohol level was below legal limit.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 15 Jan 2009 09:27:55 -0600</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>The Athens-Clarke County State Court dismissed the charge of driving under the influence in Georgia that had been filed against the head of the UGA math department. In an agreement reached last week, Joseph Fu entered a plea of no contest to reckless driving. He was found guilty of driving the wrong way on a one-way street.</p>

<p>Fu was charged with drunk driving in Georgia following a traffic stop for turning onto a highway exit ramp in the wrong direction. His blood alcohol content registered .057%, which is below the .08% legal threshold for intoxication in Georgia. Police still charged Fu under its ‘DUI Less Safe’ policy, which allows an officer to subjectively charge someone with DUI whenever alcohol is present and impairment is suspected.</p>

<p>Fu paid a $750 fine for court costs and was sentenced to 12 months probation and 20 hours of community service.</p>

<p>Have you been arrested for <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia">DUI in GA</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Arrests for DUI in Georgia Way Down</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/related/arrests-for-dui-in-georgia-way-down</link>
                      <description>Drunk driving arrests and alcohol related accidents much lower over holiday.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2009 20:36:16 -0600</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>The Georgia State Patrol is reporting much fewer incidents of drunk driving and accidents across the state during the New Year’s holiday. No one died during the New Year’s festivities, and arrests for driving under the influence in Georgia were down 25% from last year. The total number of vehicle accidents was nearly halved, making it one of the safest holidays in memory.</p>
 
<p>State troopers attribute the reduction to a weakened economy, the fact that the holiday fell in the middle of the week and the impact of safe driving and anti-Georgia DUI messages.</p>

<p>Do you need to hire a <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia">GA DUI Attorney</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Budget Cuts Slow Processing of Georgia DUI Cases</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/news/budget-cuts-slow-processing-of-georgia-dui-cases</link>
                      <description>Georgia's State Crime Lab in Augusta has huge backlog due to cuts in operating budget.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Wed, 19 Nov 2008 14:43:00 -0600</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3254/3065971348_236a4588f0_m.jpg" width="195" height="240" alt="Drunk Driving" style="float: right; padding:10px" />Due to budget cuts and consolidation of forensic and medical examiners locations, The Georgia Bureau of Investigation crime lab in Augusta has been forced to service an additional five new counties. That brings the total number of counties under its jurisdiction to 19, straining blood testing at the lab. That in turn has affected the processing of evidence in cases of suspicion of driving under the influence in Georgia.</p>

<p>The average processing time for a blood test was four to five weeks before the additional caseload was assigned to the Augusta lab. Now the average is 12 weeks, with some cases taking as long as 25 weeks. Prosecutors can not proceed with cases of Georgia DUI without toxicology results and the criminal justice system has slowed dramatically.</p>

<p>The budget cuts that lead to the increased workload at the Augusta facility were due to a shortfall in state revenue that has been described as “the worst..ever seen.”</p>

<p>If you have been arrested for GA DUI you need to hire an experienced <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia">Georgia DUI Lawyer</a>.</p>]]>
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                      <title>Grants Provided for Two Georgia DUI Programs: Nighthawks and ALS</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/news/grants-provided-for-two-georgia-dui-programs</link>
                      <description>Grant from the Georgia Governor will fund two State Patrol programs that target GA drunk driving: Nighthawks and ALS.</description>
                      <author>Bill</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 13 Nov 2008 11:39:54 -0600</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3141/3027140723_aa6307eae6.jpg" style="float: right; padding: 10px" alt="Georgia State Patrol Nighthawks" />The Georgia State Patrol has received a grant from the Governor's Office of Highway Safety to fund two DUI related programs. One is the <strong class="redtext">'GSP Nighthawks'</strong> which focuses on drunk driving identification and enforcement and the other is an ALS initiative that helps officers provide testimony during driver's license suspension hearings. Both Georgia DUI programs were started in 2004, and the new funding assures to their continuation in the coming year.</p>
 
<p>GSP Nighthawks is a team of officers that has received specialized training in the identification of a suspected drunk driver. Nighthawk patrols focus on DUI enforcement in Fulton, Cobb, DeKalb, Gwinnett and Clayton Counties in the Atlanta metro area. <span class="yellowbg">The state troopers have arrested 679 motorists for drunk driving in Georgia so far in 2008.</span> Last year the team made a total of 1,054 arrests for drunk driving. The Nighthawks Task Force has been recognized internationally as the best DUI enforcement initiative in North America.</p>
 
<p>The ALS program prepares troopers for license suspension hearings. Under Georgia DUI law the state may seek to administratively suspend a motorist's driver's license following an arrest for DUI. This is a separate action from the criminal DUI case which is addressed through the court system. The motorist is afforded the opportunity to challenge the suspension by requesting an Administrative License Suspension hearing. The Georgia State Patrol program provides training, legal assistance and even legal representation to officers for the hearing. The program also conducts research and helps with the filing of motions relevant to the license suspension.</p>
 
<p>Statistics indicate that one third of traffic fatalities in Georgia can be attributed to alcohol impairment. The objective of the GSP Nighthawk and ALS programs is to reduce that figure.</p>

<p>You should never drink and drive. Just because you have been arrested for <a href="/">drunk driving</a> doesn't mean your guilty. If you have been charged with <a href="/georgia">drunk driving in Georgia</a> you will need to hire a <a href="/georgia/lawyers-attorneys">DUI lawyer in Georgia</a> that can represent you on your DUI criminal charge and your ALS hearing.</p>]]>
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                      <title>College Football Player Charged with Georgia DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/news/college-football-player-charged-with-georgia-dui</link>
                      <description>University of Georgia player charged with drunk driving hours after game.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2008 14:16:13 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>Brandon Wood, a backup defensive tackle with the University of Georgia Bulldogs football team, was arrested early Sunday morning for drunk driving in Athens, Georgia. Wood had played in the team’s win over Vanderbilt Saturday afternoon.</p>

<p>Wood said he was picking up his girlfriend and her friends from downtown Athens. He left his parking lights on while waiting and forgot to turn on his headlights during the drive back to east campus. After being stopped for driving while lights are required by campus police around 3:40 am Sunday morning, Wood was charged with driving under the influence in Georgia.</p>

<p>Head coach Mark Richt said that Wood, while 21 and of legal age to drink, made a “bad error in judgment”. The Georgia Athletic Association policy says that an athlete who commits a first-offense violation of alcohol rules will be suspended for 10% of the season. Wood, a red-shirt sophomore who has played in all seven of Georgia’s games this year, will not be playing in the upcoming game against LSU.</p>

<p>Are you searching for a <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia">GA DUI Lawyer</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>New Law Increases Penalty for Georgia DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/news/new-law-increases-penalty-for-georgia-dui</link>
                      <description>Legislation calls for felony charges for repeat offenders.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Fri, 20 Jun 2008 15:19:39 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>The General Assembly passed legislation earlier this year increasing the consequences for driving under the influence in Georgia. The new rule aims at severely penalizing repeat drunk driving offenders.</p>

<p>Starting July 1, a fourth arrest for Georgia DUI within 10 years will be filed as an automatic felony. The first two offenses will be misdemeanors and the third will be an aggravated misdemeanor with increased fines. If found guilty, a felony arrest can result in a jail sentence of one to five years.</p>

<p>First time offenders will also be affected by the new law. In addition to enrolling in a driving program, paying fines and completing community service, those charged with drinking and driving in Georgia must undergo an evaluation for alcohol abuse and attend a treatment program.</p>

<p>A state representative hopes the penalties will keep Georgia DUI offenders from 
making the mistake again.</p>

<p>If you have been arrested for drunk driving in Georgia you need a qualified <a href="http://www.dui.com/georgia">GA DUI Lawyer</a>.</p>]]>
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                      <title>Driver in Dramatic Rescue Charged with DUI in Georgia</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/news/driver-in-dramatic-rescue-charged-with-dui-in-georgia</link>
                      <description>Atlanta man Richard Sissons had crashed through seventh floor parking garage barrier.</description>
                      <author>Bill</author>
                      <pubDate>Tue, 18 Dec 2007 18:30:40 -0600</pubDate>
                      
     
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        <![CDATA[<p><img src="/dui-library/georgia/images/richard-sissons-car.jpg" alt="Richard Sissons Car" style="float: right" />Yesterday the news media flashed images of a dramatic rescue taking place in Atlanta. Richard Sissons reportedly had passed out and crashed through the steel cables that created the edge barrier of a Buckhead area parking garage. Only a few cables were preventing Sissons’ Ford Taurus from dropping 200 feet to the street below. Inside the vehicle, Sissons was motionless after having hit his head on the steering wheel.</p>

<p>Firefighters first determined that Sissons was alive and then lowered a man upside down to break through the passenger window, enter the vehicle, place a harness around Sissons and lift him to safety. A fire captain said the rescue was <strong>“one for the history books”</strong>, as he reflected on the probability that the cables could have given way at any time or the car simply dislodged and fallen.</p> 

<p>Sissons, 36, was taken to a nearby hospital and treated for a shoulder cut. He was determined to be intoxicated and was charged with Driving Under the Influence in Georgia and damage to property. Police suspect that Sissons was speeding in the parking structure before losing control and crashing through the cables.</p>]]>
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                      <title>Georgia Supreme Court Says NO to Blood Tests</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/laws/supreme-court</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          <img class="picture_RT" src="resolveuid/6e00a76f365d2dc339cee0b8126ac474" alt="Atlanta Georgia Newspaper"
                          height="74" width="277" align="right" border="0" />Court Strikes Down
                          Mandatory Blood Tests for DUI 

                          <p>By BILL RANKIN 10/6/03</p>

                          <p>Atlanta Journal-Constitution Staff Writer</p>

                          <p>The Georgia Supreme Court today declared unconstitutional a provision
                          of the state DUI law that requires drivers involved in serious accidents
                          to take blood tests.</p>

                          <p>The "implied consent" statute allows police to ask a driver involved
                          in a serious accident to take a blood test, even when there is no
                          indication the driver was intoxicated or impaired. A refusal to take the
                          test results in a suspension of driver's license and can be used against
                          the driver in court.</p>

                          <p>The provision applies only to accidents that result in fatalities and
                          serious injuries, which can include broken bones or loss of
                          consciousness.</p>

                          <p>Atlanta lawyer Bob Chestney said the decision will affect many cases
                          and have far-reaching impact.</p>

                          <p>"It's a bright day for the Fourth Amendment in these days we're living
                          in where it's too popular to think that security is more important than
                          personal liberty," Chestney said. "It's refreshing to see our Supreme
                          Court buck that trend. It's a victory for personal freedom from
                          government intrusion."</p>

                          <p>The court's ruling does not affect another aspect of the DUI implied
                          consent law, which requires drivers to submit to blood tests when an
                          officer finds evidence a driver was intoxicated or impaired.</p>

                          <p>Chestney's client, Carey Don Cooper, was involved in a two-vehicle
                          collision on Aug. 11, 2000, in Barrow County. During the crash, the
                          driver of the pickup sustained a broken arm.</p>

                          <p>After a trooper read Cooper the implied consent notice, Cooper agreed
                          to take a blood test, which found traces of cocaine. Cooper was convicted
                          of the misdemeanor offense and appealed that he had been subjected to an
                          illegal search.</p>

                          <p>In a unanimous ruling by Justice Harris Hines, the Georgia Supreme
                          Court agreed.</p>

                          <p>"While the state's interest in guarding the welfare and safety of its
                          citizens with the perils caused by intoxicated drivers is beyond dispute,
                          it is clear that a primary purpose of [the implied consent law] is to
                          gather evidence for criminal prosecution," Hines wrote.</p>

                          <p>"No matter how important that purpose may be, it does not create a
                          special need to depart from the Fourth Amendment's requirement of
                          probable cause; otherwise it could be argued that the state's interest in
                          securing evidence in any situation of potentially serious conduct would
                          justify dispensing with any finding of probable cause," Hines said.</p>

                          <p>Winder lawyer Billy Healan, who also represents Cooper, said his
                          client faced a 15-day jail sentence, a $1,000 fine and a year on
                          probation. Healan said that at Cooper's trial there was no evidence that
                          his client was impaired.</p>

                          <p>"This is an important ruling," Healan said. "The police should have
                          reason to believe someone is under the influence before being allowed to
                          test them."</p>
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                      <title>Georgia Implied Consent Ruling</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/laws/implied-consent</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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                          <strong>State High Court Upholds DUI Law Along with Limits Pair of Cases
                          Had Tested Doctrine</strong> 

                          <p>October 4, 2005</p>

                          <p><a title="News 4 Georgia"
                          href="http://www.news4jax.com/news4georgia/index.html"
                          target="_blank">News 4 Georgia</a></p>

                          <p>ATLANTA -- The implied consent law which gives law enforcement
                          officers power to require chemical tests of suspected drunken drivers in
                          certain circumstances survived a challenge Monday before the Georgia
                          Supreme Court.</p>

                          <p>But in a pair of related cases, consolidated into one ruling, the
                          court made clear there are limits to that power.</p>

                          <p>Chemical tests can only be required if two conditions are met: an
                          individual has been involved in a traffic accident resulting in serious
                          injuries or deaths and the investigating officer has probable cause to
                          believe the individual was under the influence of alcohol or drugs.</p>

                          <p>The decision was unanimous.</p>

                          <p>The court ruled two years ago that the implied consent law was
                          unconstitutional to the extent it required a blood test regardless of
                          whether an officer had probable cause to believe the driver was under the
                          influence.</p>

                          <p>Monday's ruling resulted from new challenges filed by two men charged
                          with driving under the influence after separate car crashes.</p>

                          <p>Lawyers for the state argued this summer that the Supreme Court's
                          earlier ruling did not apply to the two men because police had probable
                          cause to suspect both of drunken driving.</p>

                          <p>While leaving the implied consent law intact, the court's decision
                          Monday produced different results for the two men challenging it.</p>

                          <p>In one, the court dismissed a claim that the defendant was not
                          properly placed under arrest before his implied consent rights were read
                          to him. The court said he had been injured in a traffic accident, the
                          officer had probable cause to believe he was under the influence and no
                          arrest was required.</p>

                          <p>In the other, however, there was no injury as defined by the law, even
                          though there was probable cause for the investigator to believe he was
                          drinking. His lawyers argued that his refusal to submit to a blood test
                          should have been suppressed at trial because he was not arrested before
                          his implied consent rights were read.</p>

                          <p>The Supreme Court agreed.</p>
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                      <title>Georgia Beer - More Alcohol 14%</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/georgia/related/georgia-beer</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          Georgia Beer Lovers to Get More Alcohol 

                          <p>Microbrews and International Concoctions to be Offered Along with
                          Usual Lightweights</p>

                          <p>Story last updated at 6:55 a.m. Monday, June 21, 2004</p>

                          <p>Associated Press</p>

                          <p>ATLANTA--Beer in Georgia is about to get more kick.</p>

                          <p>The raising of the maximum beer-alcohol content from 6 percent to 14
                          percent means a new wave of microbrews and international beers will soon
                          be for sale in the state, giving Georgians options beyond their usual
                          lightweight brews.</p>

                          <p>"Beer has gotten a bad rap because of what we've been forced to drink
                          the last 40 to 50 years," said Glen Sprouse, brewmaster at Five Seasons
                          Brewing in Atlanta. "Maybe you haven't had a good beer before."</p>

                          <p>In a move supporters billed as a way to promote tourism, lawmakers
                          passed a measure taking effect July 1 to make Georgia the nation's 42nd
                          state to allow a higher beer-alcohol content. Of the holdouts that still
                          limit beer strength, half are in the South: Alabama, Arkansas, North
                          Carolina and South Carolina.</p>

                          <p>Georgia's beer lovers are delighted.</p>

                          <p>"The beers we really liked weren't available because of this law,"
                          said Ted Hull, a founding member of a group called Georgians for World
                          Class Beer, which has pushed for reform since 1997. "We're very excited
                          about it. It's been kind of a long road to get to this point."</p>

                          <p>Breweries are anticipating the influx of beers by holding tastings and
                          parties.</p>

                          <p>Beers that will become available include homemade concoctions, those
                          brewed by Trappist monks in Belgium and Indian pale ales.</p>

                          <p>The proposal to raise the beer-alcohol limit met resistance each of
                          the last few years in the state Legislature. Some politicians were
                          concerned teenagers would seek out beers with higher alcohol limits and
                          people would get drunk faster and endanger roadways.</p>

                          <p>"The biggest concerns were adding to the number of DUIs and accidents
                          related to alcohol that may kill somebody," said Rep. Craig Brock,
                          R-Chatsworth, who voted against the bill. "It's been a hot issue."</p>

                          <p>But gourmet beer supporters say people don't drink these kinds of
                          beverages to get drunk. They said these beers are more like sipping a
                          fine wine or enjoying a piece of premium chocolate.</p>

                          <p>No one put up significant opposition to the legislation this year, not
                          even Mothers Against Drunk Driving. At the same time, beer drinkers
                          enlisted a few state representatives to help them and hired a lobbyist to
                          persuade others.</p>

                          <p>"These beers have a very strong taste. It's an acquired taste," said
                          Rep. Stephanie Stuckey Benfield, D-Decatur. "It appeals to a different
                          kind of market."</p>

                          <p>To beer drinkers, the higher alcohol content won't be the appeal.
                          They'll be drawn more to the wider variety of flavors available from
                          stronger beers, Strouse said.</p>

                          <p>These beers have more aromatic, bitter and fruit-like tastes. Their
                          alcohol contents range from just over 6 percent for Sierra Nevada to 10.2
                          percent for a beer like the trippel made by the Trappists.</p>

                          <p>They cost a few dollars more than regular beers because they're more
                          expensive to brew. That could also make them unappealing to people just
                          looking to get drunk, said Hull, a civil engineer and home brewer.</p>

                          <p>With the new law, the brewmaster for Athens-based Terrapin Beer
                          Company, Brian Buckowski, is looking forward to making a mixture he calls
                          the Big Hoppy Monster, a red ale with a taste of caramel and a citrus
                          aroma with a 7.5 percent alcohol content.</p>

                          <p>"It opens a lot of doors to different styles of beers," Buckowski
                          said.</p>
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