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        <title>dui.com - Wisconsin Moves to Make First DUI a Crime</title>
        <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/wisconsin/news/wisconisin-dui-first-a-crime</link>
        <description>Wisconsin Moves to Make First DUI Arrest a Crime</description>
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                      <title>Wisconsin Drunk Driver Calls 911 to Report Herself</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/wisconsin/news/wisconsin-drunk-driver-calls-911-to-report-herself</link>
                      <description>WIS DUI charged after dispatcher instructs motorist to pull over.</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Tue, 03 Nov 2009 17:04:36 -0600</pubDate>
                      
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>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".</p>

<p>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.</p>

<p>Chief Deputy Backus said DUI self-reporting is rare.</p>

<p>Are you looking for a <a href="http://www.dui.com/wisconsin">WI DUI attorney</a>?</p>]]>
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                      <title>Wisconsin Drunk Driver Rights</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/wisconsin/news/wisconsin-drunk-driver</link>
                      <description></description>
                      <author>admin</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>DUI News</category>
     
     
        <category>Wisconsin DUI</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[
                          <strong>Traffic Stop Violated Rights of Drunken Driver, Court
                          Rules</strong><br />
                           RYAN J. FOLEY Associated Press MADISON, Wisconsin 

                          <p>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.</p>

                          <p>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.</p>

                          <p>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.</p>

                          <p>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.</p>

                          <p>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.</p>

                          <p>"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."</p>

                          <p>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.</p>

                          <p>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.</p>

                          <p>"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."</p>

                          <p>Kevin Calkins, a Sauk County prosecutor who handled the case, did not
                          immediately return a phone message.</p>

                          <p>Source: http://www.duluthsuperior.com</p>
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                      <title>Wisconsin Moves to Make First DUI a Crime</title>
                      <link>http://www.dui.com/dui-library/wisconsin/news/wisconisin-dui-first-a-crime</link>
                      <description>Wisconsin Moves to Make First DUI Arrest a Crime</description>
                      <author>Monica</author>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 31 Aug 2006 12:10:45 -0500</pubDate>
                      
     
        <category>DUI</category>
     
     
        <category>DUI arrest</category>
     
     
        <category>drinking and driving</category>
     
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        <![CDATA[<font size="2">
<div><a href="http://www.legis.state.wi.us/">Wisconsin state legislators</a> are attempting to strengthen <strong>drunken driving penalties</strong> by making a first <strong>DUI arrest</strong> a criminal act. Currently such a <strong>DUI&nbsp;arrest</strong> is an ordinance violation, making Wisconsin the only state in the country where a first <strong>DUI</strong> is not a crime.</div>
<br />
<div>The legislation will also permit law enforcement agencies to set-up sobriety checkpoints, which are currently deployed in 39 states.</div>
<br />
<div>Vehicular accidents involving alcohol are responsible for hundreds of deaths in the state. Proponents of the bill say it will &quot;give law enforcement officers the tools they need to combat that.&quot;</div>
<br />
<div>Opponents think the focus should be on repeat <strong>DUI</strong> offenders, and they find the sobriety checkpoints a presumption of guilt and a misuse of police resources.</div>
<br />
<div><strong>Drinking and driving</strong> is a serious issue though somewhat of a lifestyle for citizens of the state. The roadways feature many roadside taverns and the Wisconsin Tavern League is a powerful lobby organization that influences state politics.</div>
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