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        <title>dui.com - Nevada's New Drug Driving Law (Marijuana Intoxication)</title>
        <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/nevada/news/drug-driving-law</link>
        <description>Nevada's Drug Impairment Law Hailed, Criticized.</description>
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                      <title>Police Checkpoint Leads to Arrests for DUI in Las Vegas</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/nevada/news/police-checkpoint-leads-to-arrests-for-dui-in-las-vegas</link>
                      <description>Weekend effort targets drunk driving in Southern Nevada along Vegas Strip.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Tue, 28 Jul 2009 10:38:56 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>Law enforcement agencies in Southern Nevada combined for a crackdown on drunk driving in Las Vegas. The Nevada State Patrol and the Las Vegas Police Department set up an eight-hour sobriety checkpoint just west of the Las Vegas Strip. More than 4,700 vehicles were checked, and 11 motorists were charged with driving under the influence in Nevada.</p>

<p>The checkpoint was conducted between 7:00 pm Saturday and 3:00 am Sunday near the intersection of Sahara Avenue and Valley View Boulevard. The effort was funded in part by a grant from the Nevada Department of Public Safety and was coordinated through the National Highway Safety Administration.</p>

<p>Have you been charged with <a href="http://www.dui.com/nevada/clark">DUI in Las Vegas, NV?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Reno Police Given Devices to Test for Nevada DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/nevada/news/reno-police-given-devices-to-test-for-nevada-dui</link>
                      <description>14 portable breath testing devices will be used to combat drunk driving in Reno area.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Tue, 30 Jun 2009 17:59:02 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>The Northern Nevada DUI Task Force has donated 14 breath testing devices to the Reno Police Department for use in checking suspected drunk drivers. The handheld devices will provide a preliminary breath test result to determine if further investigation for driving under the influence in Nevada is warranted.</p>

<p>The units costs about $4000 each and they will allow officers to quickly test blood alcohol content of those suspected of drunk driving. Previously, investigators had to wait for a specially equipped patrol car with breath testing equipment to arrive on a NV DUI scene.</p>

<p>According to statistics from the Reno police department, the number of Nevada DUI arrests in the area was down 9.5% in 2008. Accidents related to being under the influence of alcohol or drugs dropped 11.6%. The reductions are attributed to increased awareness of the dangers of drinking and driving as well as DUI enforcement activities.</p>

<p>Are you searching for a <a href="http://www.dui.com/nevada">NV DUI lawyer</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Number of Nevada DUI Fatalities Down in Clark County</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/nevada/news/number-of-nevada-dui-fatalities-down-in-clark-county</link>
                      <description>Nevada sees one of largest reductions of traffic related deaths in the nation.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Mon, 18 Aug 2008 15:07:58 -0500</pubDate>
                      
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        <![CDATA[<p>The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has released statistics showing that highway deaths dropped 3.9% across the country in 2007. The state of Nevada realized a 13% drop, from 431 to 371, making it sixth best in the nation for reducing overall traffic fatalities. More than half of the drop in total numbers came from Clark County.</p>

<p>The number of fatal accidents involving alcohol also dropped in Nevada; by 8%. Approximately one-third of all highway deaths in Clark County were attributable to drunk driving in the Las Vegas area.</p>

<p>Through the Labor Day weekend, state law enforcement agencies will be conducting a campaign titled ‘Over the Limit, Under Arrest’ targeting Nevada DUI offenses. In addition to law enforcement, public awareness campaigns have helped reduce the incidents of driving under the influence in Nevada. One such effort called ‘Every 15 Minutes’ has been successful in dramatically reducing high school student highway deaths involving drinking and driving in Clark County.</p>

<p>Have you been arrested for <a href="http://www.dui.com/nevada/clark">DUI in Clark County, NV</a> or Las Vegas?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Reno Man With 7 Priors Dodges 8th!</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/nevada/news/reno</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>DUI News</category>
     
     
        <category>Nevada DUI</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          <strong>Police Arrest Man with Seven Priors</strong> 

                          <p>March 27, 1998</p>

                          <p>RENO, Nev. (AP) - A Reno man police say has seven drunken driving
                          arrests has dodged No. 8, but still faces a raft of other charges.</p>

                          <p>Joseph Donald Clichi, 48, was being watched by officers under funding
                          provided by the repeat DUI offender grant.</p>

                          <p>He left his house for work Friday morning, stopping on the way to pick
                          up a six-pack. By the time police could pull him over, officers say he
                          was pretty well finished with his first beer of the day.</p>

                          <p>A preliminary breath test put his blood alcohol at 0.05 percent, half
                          the 0.1 percent at which a person is presumed to be under the influence
                          in Nevada.</p>

                          <p>But he faces charges of driving on a revoked license, possession of an
                          open container, possession of marijuana and possession of paraphernalia.
                          He was being held under $2,570 bail.</p>

                          <p>Police say he was arrested for DUI twice in the 1970s, three times in
                          the '80s and twice in the 1990s.</p>
                        ]]>
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                      <title>Nevada City's Ban</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/nevada/news/nevada</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>DUI News</category>
     
     
        <category>Nevada DUI</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          <strong>Gold Country Town Bans Boozing in Street</strong> 

                          <p>NEVADA CITY (AP) -- As he strolled this historic gold-mining town in a
                          steady downpour, Ike Frazee, a 25-year-old pastry chef with a black beret
                          and a long goatee, bemoaned the ebbing of a hallowed tradition.</p>

                          <p>"Drinking on the street? Hell, yes! This is the only place I could do
                          it,'' Frazee said. "It added a lot of character to the town.''</p>

                          <p>Ending a mining-town convention that endured for generations, Nevada
                          City officials recently voted to ban public drinking on the city's
                          downtown streets and sidewalks.</p>

                          <p>On New Year's Eve, revelers had one of their last chances to roam
                          through the Sierra Nevada foothills town toting open containers of
                          alcoholic beverages before the new law goes into effect Monday.</p>

                          <p>In reality, the Nevada City Council action -- giving police authority
                          to issue citations and roust people for drinking -- brings the town into
                          conformance with other cities that ban drinking on downtown streets,
                          sidewalks, parking lots and alleys.</p>

                          <p>But in Nevada City, whose council over the years rejected several
                          attempts to ban drinking in public, this was no casual action.</p>

                          <p>While some merchants and council members complained that a handful of
                          people on sidewalks nursing bottles of beer and wine were a nuisance to
                          the tourist town, others bemoaned the loss of a drinker's right.</p>

                          <p>"There is 140 years of tradition in town of drinking on the streets
                          and that should not be thrown away for people who have socially
                          unacceptable behavior,'' protested Tom Coleman, owner of the town's
                          144-year-old National Hotel.</p>

                          <p>After the council voted 4-1 to enact the drinking ban, Coleman said
                          the matter should have been put to a citywide vote.</p>

                          <p>"Basically, the majority is suffering because of a minority,'' Coleman
                          said, "and I don't want to see the erosion of another right.''</p>

                          <p>But council member Sharon Tobiassen, who pushed for the vote after
                          city workers signed petitions complaining about inebriated people hanging
                          out downtown, said the step was needed to halt a budding "skid row
                          atmosphere."</p>

                          <p>She said nostalgia for Nevada City's mining days is a poor excuse for
                          allowing open-air drinking downtown.</p>

                          <p>"When you see people openly drinking and defying all authority, I say,
                          `Let's move into the 21st century,' '' Tobiassen said. "Some years ago,
                          we banned lynching and dueling on the streets, another carryover from the
                          Old West. We no longer need to live in that mode.''</p>

                          <p>The new law won't affect Nevada City's restaurants and bars, which
                          will continue to serve alcohol. Under state beverage control laws,
                          patrons have never been allowed to take drinks outside such
                          establishments.</p>

                          <p>But the downtown drinking crackdown is bitter ale for residents such
                          as Dee "Little Zappa'' Myers, 28, who said he's enjoyed his right to
                          trudge through town swigging from a bottle of beer.</p>

                          <p>"Perhaps there's pressure from community leaders to gentrify the town,
                          "Myers said. "Crusty old folks have been drinking here for years. What do
                          they want us to do now? Drink `near beer' in back rooms?''</p>

                          <p>Under the new law, permits can be granted to allow open-air drinking
                          during special events, such as the town's Victorian Christmas street
                          festivals or its popular Fourth of July Constitution Day. But the law may
                          be a death knell for the town's era as a drinkers' paradise.</p>

                          <p>As Nevada City was transformed over the years into a charming mecca of
                          upscale boutiques, eateries and bed-and-breakfast inns, many trendy new
                          businesses replaced old gin joints and hard-boozin' taverns.</p>

                          <p>"This used to be a working man's town,'' Coleman said. "The loggers,
                          the truck drivers, the guys in Levis and suspenders don't come downtown
                          anymore. If a guy with muddy boots walked into one of these yuppie places
                          today, he'd feel very uncomfortable.''</p>

                          <p>Nevada City Mayor Harry Stewart said police have received increased
                          complaints in recent months about individuals drinking and loitering
                          downtown. He said he feared adults were providing booze to youths.</p>

                          <p>And as long as drinking in public was legal, Stewart said, police
                          couldn't intervene until someone became intoxicated or disruptive.</p>

                          <p>"Nevada City is very strong on tradition, and one of the hardest
                          things is change,'' Stewart said. "But I think people, down deep in their
                          hearts, knew that the time had come.''</p>

                          <p>Published Wednesday, January 1, 1997, in the San Jose Mercury News</p>
                        ]]>
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                      <title>Las Vegas and DUI</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/nevada/news/las-vegas-dui</link>
                      <description>Vegas Still Known for DUI/DWI Problems.</description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>DUI News</category>
     
     
        <category>Nevada DUI</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[<p>Las Vegas, NV-Several recent alcohol-related deaths and DUI arrests in the Las Vegas Valley have brought attention to reforming <a title="Nevada DUI Laws" href="/nevada">Nevada DUI laws</a>.</p>

<p>In Sin City, last call is never announced, meaning that some drinkers never get a late-night halt to their vice before they hit the road.</p>

<p>An organization called Stop DUI believes that because of Nevada's easygoing attitude toward drinking, the state should have the strictest DUI laws in the United States. Instead Nevada has a <a title="Blood Alcohol Content Chart" href="/dui-library/bac/bac-chart">blood alcohol content</a> (BAC) limit of 0.10, lower than many states' limit of 0.08.</p>

<p>Clark County District Attorney Stewart Bell hopes that these serious accidents will attract more attention to the DUI problem in Nevada, and result in positive reform.</p>
<p>One driver killed six teens on a roadside work crew after she passed
                          out at the wheel. The driver, 21-year-old Jessica Williams, survived and
                          is held on $5 million bail.</p>
<p>Juanita Kim McDonald, 25, crashed into a group of tourists on a
                          sidewalk in front of the Aladdin Hotel. She injured six of them, and one
                          died weeks later due to serious injuries.</p>

                          <p>Another intoxicated driver, Michael Pickett, 24, killed four innocent
                          bystanders, including a pregnant woman. They were parked at a stoplight
                          when Pickett slammed his truck into their vehicle. He had a <a title="BAC" href="/dui-library/bac/bac-chart">BAC</a> of 0.22, more than double that of the legal limit of 0.10.</p>

<p>Several survivors of other drunk-driving accidents are undergoing
long-term rehabilitation, their lives put on hold due to the carelessness of drunk drivers.</p>

<p>Despite the long list of accidents and fatalities of late, Bell believes that the numbers look positive. According to the <a title="Nevada Highway Patrol" href="http://nhp.nv.gov/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Nevada Highway Patrol</a> and county records, the 11,913 DUI arrests of 1999 were down from 12,196 in 1998. The number seems more significant when considering the state's high population growth.</p>

<p>The <a title="Office of Traffic Safety" href="http://ots.state.nv.us/"
target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Office of Traffic Safety</a> at the <a
title="Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles" href="http://www.dmvnv.com/"
 target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles</a> (NV DMV) and Public Safety record traffic fatalities. They found that 35.4% of <a title="Clark County" href="http://www.co.clark.nv.us/"
 target="_blank" rel="nofollow">Clark County's</a> vehicle fatalities were from drunk driving in 1999. The county had 69 drunk driving deaths. In 1993 the amount of deaths were less, however the percentage accountable to drunk driving was roughly the same at 38.7%.</p>
<p>Sandy Heverly, head of Stop DUI, would like the Nevada's legal <a
title="BAC" href="/dui-library/bac/bac-chart">BAC</a> limit to be lowered from 0.10 to 0.08, a level that is common in several states. She would also like a DUI-caused death to be considered as second-degree murder, which requires 25 years to life in prison.</p>

<p>June 23, 2000</p>
<p><strong>Also See:</strong></p>
<ul>
  <li><a title="Nevada's Drug Impairment Law Hailed, Criticized"
       href="/dui-library/nevada/news/drug-driving-law">Nevada's Drug Impairment Law Hailed, Criticized</a></li>
</ul>

<p><strong>Related Links:</strong></p>
<ul>
   <li><a title="Las Vegas DUI Attorneys"
        href="/nevada/clark">Las Vegas DUI Attorneys and Lawyers</a></li>
   <li><a title="Nevada DUI Laws" href="/nevada">Nevada DUI Laws</a></li>
</ul>
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                      <title>Nevada's New Drug Driving Law (Marijuana Intoxication)</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/nevada/news/drug-driving-law</link>
                      <description>Nevada's Drug Impairment Law Hailed, Criticized.</description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>DUI News</category>
     
     
        <category>Marijuana Intoxication</category>
     
     
        <category>Nevada DUI</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[<div align="center"><img src="resolveuid/55e4d4c66483ca1c19356a755a369896" alt="Reno Gazette-Journal" height="40" width="430" border="0" /> </div>
<p>8/30/2003 09:45 pm<br />
  By Martha Bellisle<br />
  RENO GAZETTE-JOURNAL</p>
<p>Too many drivers high on drugs are causing fatal crashes while
  avoiding prosecution, say federal officials who are calling for new laws
  nationwide that would send a driver to prison without proving drugs
  caused the accident.</p>
<p>The new legislation, to be modeled after statutes recently passed in
  Nevada and eight other states, would make it illegal for drivers to have
  drugs, including marijuana, in their systems.</p>
<p>Under these laws, prosecutors don't have to prove
  that the drugs impacted the driver's ability to stay
  on the road. They simply must show the drugs were in the
  driver's body.</p>
<p>A positive test could mean a 20-year sentence for each count.</p>
<p>Two Reno drivers and one woman from Las Vegas who face decades in
  prison after being involved in fatal accidents and testing positive for
  marijuana are challenging the law in court. Their success or failure
  could affect legislation across the country.</p>
<p>"The intent (of the law) was to make sure that if
  someone was driving under the influence of a controlled substance, they
  would be held responsible for loss of life," said U.S. Rep.
  Jon Porter, R-Nev., who sponsored Nevada's prohibited
  substance drug bill in 1999 while a state senator.</p>
<p>But critics of Nevada's law, including
  toxicologists, lawyers, civil libertarians and some lawmakers, say the
  statue is unfair and unconstitutional because it does not require proof
  that the driver was actually impaired by the drugs.</p>
<p>And, they say, the cut-off levels for the drugs listed in the statute
  are so small that impairment would be unlikely in many circumstances.</p>
<p>This means that a person who uses marijuana at a party on Saturday
  night could test positive when in an accident on Monday, days after the
  drugs were taken, critics say. That's because unlike
  alcohol, some drugs can stay in a person's system for
  a long time.</p>
<p>"People are going to prison for smoking a joint a
  day or two or three ago," said John Watkins, a Las Vegas
  lawyer for one of three Nevadans currently charged under the law.</p>
<p>"The whole idea of driving under the influence is
  driving under the influence," he said.
  "But we're putting people in prison
  who are not impaired."</p>
<p>Last year, Watkins challenged the law in the Nevada Supreme Court. But
  the justices upheld the statute, saying: "the
  governmental interest in maintaining safe highways is sufficient for our
  prohibited substance statute to survive a constitutional
  attack&acirc"</p>
<p>Despite the high court's ruling, Assemblywoman
  Chris Giunchigliani, D-Las Vegas, is determined to overhaul the law.</p>
<p>She and two other lawmakers, Bernie Anderson, D-Sparks and Marcus
  Conklin, D-Las Vegas, introduced a bill during the last session that
  would increase the statute's allowable amounts of
  marijuana in an attempt to measure impairment, not just the presence of
  drug.</p>
<p>They plan to bring it back in 2005.</p>]]>
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