Dayton
Daily News...
Arrests
of repeat DUI offenders
increasing
December 29, 2011
SPRINGFIELD
— More people are being
arrested for driving under the influence, including more with multiple
convictions for impaired driving.
That
has local authorities taking more
steps to crack down on the problem.
Sgt.
Steve Duteil of the Ohio Highway
Patrol’s Springfield post said two drivers have been arrested in the
last two
weeks who have 16 total convictions for operating a vehicle while
intoxicated.
Duteil
called habitual repeat
offenders “a huge concern.”
“It
is a big problem here. We only
have a limited amount of resources to combat it,” he said.
The
patrol and other agencies are
targeting the New Year’s holiday to crack down on drunk drivers.
They’ve
flooded the airways with “Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over” ads and will
pay
overtime to have more officers on the street.
“We’re
educating and trying to get
people to stay where they’re partying at, not drive, or have a
designated
driver or call a cab,” Duteil said.
Last
year, the patrol arrested 243
people over the New Year’s holiday weekend, up from 152 arrests in 2009.
Thirty-eight
people died on Ohio roads
between Dec. 22 and Dec. 31 in 2010, the highest holiday death toll in
at least
five years.
Statewide,
OVI arrests are tracking
about 2 percent higher, with 23,395 people charged so far this year.
That
includes Michael D. Mcallister,
58, and Scott Rice, 45, both of Springfield.
Mcallister
has been charged with two
OVI counts and two counts of driving under suspension. He allegedly
rear-ended
a vehicle stopped at a stop sign on Blee Road near U.S. 68 on Christmas
Eve,
Duteil said.
Rice
was arrested Dec. 14 and charged
with OVI.
Mcallister
has six prior OVI
convictions and Rice has 10.
Duteil
said law enforcement officers
are boosting enforcement to fight the trend.
“We
want to send the message if you
are going to drink, get a designated driver (or) you’ll be arrested,”
he said.
More
than 80 Ohio law-enforcement
agencies plan stepped-up patrols to catch drunken drivers during the
holiday
season. If you see someone who shouldn’t be on the road, call (877)
7-PATROL.
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