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#1
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![]() "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Doug, It is becoming normal for DUI violators to be charged with murder when a death is involved. The charge might be murder in the 2nd degree, but repeat DUI violators who then have a DUI involving a death are being charged in the 1st degree. I am aware of one person who received the death penalty for a DUI death. I an not a proponent of the death penalty, but I am glad DUI is not being aggressively prosecuted. But, I wish the pursuit would be of the high offenders, the mindset here(at least in some communities) seems to be to turn it into another cash cow for the guvmint.....with overaggressive enforcement at the lower end ( high fines, "community service" counseling,...which drums up more work for the 'connected' while the multiple repeat offenders seem to be able to get away with it time and again. (one of my dock neighbors is a cop on a DUI unit) "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... This situation won't change until more prosecutors are prepared to charge violators with murder instead of manslaughter, and put them away for LONG periods of time. I'm aware of one case where this worked (for automobile DWI). Just one. I'm sure it's rare. |
#2
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"P. Fritz" wrote in message
... "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Doug, It is becoming normal for DUI violators to be charged with murder when a death is involved. The charge might be murder in the 2nd degree, but repeat DUI violators who then have a DUI involving a death are being charged in the 1st degree. I am aware of one person who received the death penalty for a DUI death. I an not a proponent of the death penalty, but I am glad DUI is not being aggressively prosecuted. But, I wish the pursuit would be of the high offenders, the mindset here(at least in some communities) seems to be to turn it into another cash cow for the guvmint.....with overaggressive enforcement at the lower end ( high fines, "community service" counseling,...which drums up more work for the 'connected' while the multiple repeat offenders seem to be able to get away with it time and again. (one of my dock neighbors is a cop on a DUI unit) So, bitch to your government slobs about the situation. You may not need the laws changed. Sometimes, prosecutors have options available that they don't use unless they feel the public's not happy with their work. Charging offenders with murder, for instance. |
#3
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![]() "P. Fritz" wrote in message ... "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Doug, It is becoming normal for DUI violators to be charged with murder when a death is involved. The charge might be murder in the 2nd degree, but repeat DUI violators who then have a DUI involving a death are being charged in the 1st degree. I am aware of one person who received the death penalty for a DUI death. I an not a proponent of the death penalty, but I am glad DUI is not being aggressively prosecuted. But, I wish the pursuit would be of the high offenders, the mindset here(at least in some communities) seems to be to turn it into another cash cow for the guvmint.....with overaggressive enforcement at the lower end ( high fines, "community service" counseling,...which drums up more work for the 'connected' while the multiple repeat offenders seem to be able to get away with it time and again. (one of my dock neighbors is a cop on a DUI unit) "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... This situation won't change until more prosecutors are prepared to charge violators with murder instead of manslaughter, and put them away for LONG periods of time. I'm aware of one case where this worked (for automobile DWI). Just one. I'm sure it's rare. And your cop buddy, if not him, has innumerable cop-buddies who are the worst offenders, but they get away with their stupidity. It's usually along the lines of, "Ok, brother, can you make it home from here?" or "Just park your car over there and we'll give you a ride home." or "Let's let your buddy (sometimes less drunk) drive the rest of the way." or "Give me your keys and sleep it off. I'll be back at the end of my duty with your keys." I would love to see a zero tolerance campaign that is well publicized and strongly enforced on the water. I know that the lakes I frequent don't even have a sign, let alone one that people will notice, commenting on drinking and boating. Then there's the good old resorts on the lakes with their guest docks and the only reason people stop there is to get liquored up before they get back on the water. Yeah, stupidity, drinking, and boating put us all at risk, risk of serious life-changing or life-ending consequences, even those of us who try to have a safe boating experience. I have no compassion for the drunken fool who operates a car or boat. But that's just me. |
#4
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![]() "Hank" wrote in message m... "P. Fritz" wrote in message ... "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Doug, It is becoming normal for DUI violators to be charged with murder when a death is involved. The charge might be murder in the 2nd degree, but repeat DUI violators who then have a DUI involving a death are being charged in the 1st degree. I am aware of one person who received the death penalty for a DUI death. I an not a proponent of the death penalty, but I am glad DUI is not being aggressively prosecuted. But, I wish the pursuit would be of the high offenders, the mindset here(at least in some communities) seems to be to turn it into another cash cow for the guvmint.....with overaggressive enforcement at the lower end ( high fines, "community service" counseling,...which drums up more work for the 'connected' while the multiple repeat offenders seem to be able to get away with it time and again. (one of my dock neighbors is a cop on a DUI unit) "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... This situation won't change until more prosecutors are prepared to charge violators with murder instead of manslaughter, and put them away for LONG periods of time. I'm aware of one case where this worked (for automobile DWI). Just one. I'm sure it's rare. And your cop buddy, if not him, has innumerable cop-buddies who are the worst offenders, but they get away with their stupidity. It's usually along the lines of, "Ok, brother, can you make it home from here?" or "Just park your car over there and we'll give you a ride home." or "Let's let your buddy (sometimes less drunk) drive the rest of the way." or "Give me your keys and sleep it off. I'll be back at the end of my duty with your keys." I would love to see a zero tolerance campaign that is well publicized and strongly enforced on the water. I know that the lakes I frequent don't even have a sign, let alone one that people will notice, commenting on drinking and boating. Then there's the good old resorts on the lakes with their guest docks and the only reason people stop there is to get liquored up before they get back on the water. Yeah, stupidity, drinking, and boating put us all at risk, risk of serious life-changing or life-ending consequences, even those of us who try to have a safe boating experience. I have no compassion for the drunken fool who operates a car or boat. But that's just me. Frankly, I wonder why more drunks don't kill themselves, even with the boat standing still. Along comes a wake, the boat rocks, off goes the captain into the water. We can only dream. Personally, I take just one beer with me when I go fishing, and plan on opening it only if the fishing has been extraordinary. 99% of the time, that beer comes home unopened. :-( |
#5
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Doug,
I don't drink anymore, but when I did I would limit myself to one beer every two hours. In between I would drink water or a soft drink. "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "Hank" wrote in message m... "P. Fritz" wrote in message ... "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Doug, It is becoming normal for DUI violators to be charged with murder when a death is involved. The charge might be murder in the 2nd degree, but repeat DUI violators who then have a DUI involving a death are being charged in the 1st degree. I am aware of one person who received the death penalty for a DUI death. I an not a proponent of the death penalty, but I am glad DUI is not being aggressively prosecuted. But, I wish the pursuit would be of the high offenders, the mindset here(at least in some communities) seems to be to turn it into another cash cow for the guvmint.....with overaggressive enforcement at the lower end ( high fines, "community service" counseling,...which drums up more work for the 'connected' while the multiple repeat offenders seem to be able to get away with it time and again. (one of my dock neighbors is a cop on a DUI unit) "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... This situation won't change until more prosecutors are prepared to charge violators with murder instead of manslaughter, and put them away for LONG periods of time. I'm aware of one case where this worked (for automobile DWI). Just one. I'm sure it's rare. And your cop buddy, if not him, has innumerable cop-buddies who are the worst offenders, but they get away with their stupidity. It's usually along the lines of, "Ok, brother, can you make it home from here?" or "Just park your car over there and we'll give you a ride home." or "Let's let your buddy (sometimes less drunk) drive the rest of the way." or "Give me your keys and sleep it off. I'll be back at the end of my duty with your keys." I would love to see a zero tolerance campaign that is well publicized and strongly enforced on the water. I know that the lakes I frequent don't even have a sign, let alone one that people will notice, commenting on drinking and boating. Then there's the good old resorts on the lakes with their guest docks and the only reason people stop there is to get liquored up before they get back on the water. Yeah, stupidity, drinking, and boating put us all at risk, risk of serious life-changing or life-ending consequences, even those of us who try to have a safe boating experience. I have no compassion for the drunken fool who operates a car or boat. But that's just me. Frankly, I wonder why more drunks don't kill themselves, even with the boat standing still. Along comes a wake, the boat rocks, off goes the captain into the water. We can only dream. Personally, I take just one beer with me when I go fishing, and plan on opening it only if the fishing has been extraordinary. 99% of the time, that beer comes home unopened. :-( |
#6
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For some reason, alcohol in the middle of the day makes me feel like I've
got 100 lbs of rocks in my shoes. Not the way I like to be when fishing. "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message news ![]() Doug, I don't drink anymore, but when I did I would limit myself to one beer every two hours. In between I would drink water or a soft drink. "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "Hank" wrote in message m... "P. Fritz" wrote in message ... "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Doug, It is becoming normal for DUI violators to be charged with murder when a death is involved. The charge might be murder in the 2nd degree, but repeat DUI violators who then have a DUI involving a death are being charged in the 1st degree. I am aware of one person who received the death penalty for a DUI death. I an not a proponent of the death penalty, but I am glad DUI is not being aggressively prosecuted. But, I wish the pursuit would be of the high offenders, the mindset here(at least in some communities) seems to be to turn it into another cash cow for the guvmint.....with overaggressive enforcement at the lower end ( high fines, "community service" counseling,...which drums up more work for the 'connected' while the multiple repeat offenders seem to be able to get away with it time and again. (one of my dock neighbors is a cop on a DUI unit) "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... This situation won't change until more prosecutors are prepared to charge violators with murder instead of manslaughter, and put them away for LONG periods of time. I'm aware of one case where this worked (for automobile DWI). Just one. I'm sure it's rare. And your cop buddy, if not him, has innumerable cop-buddies who are the worst offenders, but they get away with their stupidity. It's usually along the lines of, "Ok, brother, can you make it home from here?" or "Just park your car over there and we'll give you a ride home." or "Let's let your buddy (sometimes less drunk) drive the rest of the way." or "Give me your keys and sleep it off. I'll be back at the end of my duty with your keys." I would love to see a zero tolerance campaign that is well publicized and strongly enforced on the water. I know that the lakes I frequent don't even have a sign, let alone one that people will notice, commenting on drinking and boating. Then there's the good old resorts on the lakes with their guest docks and the only reason people stop there is to get liquored up before they get back on the water. Yeah, stupidity, drinking, and boating put us all at risk, risk of serious life-changing or life-ending consequences, even those of us who try to have a safe boating experience. I have no compassion for the drunken fool who operates a car or boat. But that's just me. Frankly, I wonder why more drunks don't kill themselves, even with the boat standing still. Along comes a wake, the boat rocks, off goes the captain into the water. We can only dream. Personally, I take just one beer with me when I go fishing, and plan on opening it only if the fishing has been extraordinary. 99% of the time, that beer comes home unopened. :-( |
#7
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Doug,
I don't drink anymore, but when I did I would limit myself to one beer every two hours. In between I would drink water or a soft drink. "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... "Hank" wrote in message m... "P. Fritz" wrote in message ... "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Doug, It is becoming normal for DUI violators to be charged with murder when a death is involved. The charge might be murder in the 2nd degree, but repeat DUI violators who then have a DUI involving a death are being charged in the 1st degree. I am aware of one person who received the death penalty for a DUI death. I an not a proponent of the death penalty, but I am glad DUI is not being aggressively prosecuted. But, I wish the pursuit would be of the high offenders, the mindset here(at least in some communities) seems to be to turn it into another cash cow for the guvmint.....with overaggressive enforcement at the lower end ( high fines, "community service" counseling,...which drums up more work for the 'connected' while the multiple repeat offenders seem to be able to get away with it time and again. (one of my dock neighbors is a cop on a DUI unit) "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... This situation won't change until more prosecutors are prepared to charge violators with murder instead of manslaughter, and put them away for LONG periods of time. I'm aware of one case where this worked (for automobile DWI). Just one. I'm sure it's rare. And your cop buddy, if not him, has innumerable cop-buddies who are the worst offenders, but they get away with their stupidity. It's usually along the lines of, "Ok, brother, can you make it home from here?" or "Just park your car over there and we'll give you a ride home." or "Let's let your buddy (sometimes less drunk) drive the rest of the way." or "Give me your keys and sleep it off. I'll be back at the end of my duty with your keys." I would love to see a zero tolerance campaign that is well publicized and strongly enforced on the water. I know that the lakes I frequent don't even have a sign, let alone one that people will notice, commenting on drinking and boating. Then there's the good old resorts on the lakes with their guest docks and the only reason people stop there is to get liquored up before they get back on the water. Yeah, stupidity, drinking, and boating put us all at risk, risk of serious life-changing or life-ending consequences, even those of us who try to have a safe boating experience. I have no compassion for the drunken fool who operates a car or boat. But that's just me. Frankly, I wonder why more drunks don't kill themselves, even with the boat standing still. Along comes a wake, the boat rocks, off goes the captain into the water. We can only dream. Personally, I take just one beer with me when I go fishing, and plan on opening it only if the fishing has been extraordinary. 99% of the time, that beer comes home unopened. :-( |
#8
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Fritz,
The cops have no way who is the high offenders, but the one way to stop someone from becoming a "high offender" (whatever that is), is to stop and charge everyone guilt of DUI. The key to make sure these people do not become a "high offender" is to make them attend a silly ass school, make them do silly ass community hours, and give them a fine stiff enough to make sure they don't make another silly ass mistake. DUI, even at .08 is very serious. "P. Fritz" wrote in message ... "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Doug, It is becoming normal for DUI violators to be charged with murder when a death is involved. The charge might be murder in the 2nd degree, but repeat DUI violators who then have a DUI involving a death are being charged in the 1st degree. I am aware of one person who received the death penalty for a DUI death. I an not a proponent of the death penalty, but I am glad DUI is not being aggressively prosecuted. But, I wish the pursuit would be of the high offenders, the mindset here(at least in some communities) seems to be to turn it into another cash cow for the guvmint.....with overaggressive enforcement at the lower end ( high fines, "community service" counseling,...which drums up more work for the 'connected' while the multiple repeat offenders seem to be able to get away with it time and again. (one of my dock neighbors is a cop on a DUI unit) "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... This situation won't change until more prosecutors are prepared to charge violators with murder instead of manslaughter, and put them away for LONG periods of time. I'm aware of one case where this worked (for automobile DWI). Just one. I'm sure it's rare. |
#9
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![]() "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Fritz, The cops have no way who is the high offenders, but the one way to stop someone from becoming a "high offender" (whatever that is), is to stop and charge everyone guilt of DUI. The key to make sure these people do not become a "high offender" is to make them attend a silly ass school, make them do silly ass community hours, and give them a fine stiff enough to make sure they don't make another silly ass mistake. DUI, even at .08 is very serious. My point is that some communities have the mindset of quanitity nor quality..........I would much rather have them patroling looking for the driver weaving across lanes that blows a .25 rather than sitting around the corner from the local pub waiting for the first car to pull out, or as they do in some cases, road blocking. DUI is serious, but it is not simply a matter of BAC..........it varies by the person........ having had my dock neighbor cop m bring down his hand held unit to the dock and test people during one of our dock parties, (the hard part was getting people to not drink for 15 minutes so that the test would be valid) there were some people who should not have been behind a wheel at .05, others passed all the other sobriety tests at .10 or higher. "P. Fritz" wrote in message ... "Dr. Dr. . R. Name" wrote in message ... Doug, It is becoming normal for DUI violators to be charged with murder when a death is involved. The charge might be murder in the 2nd degree, but repeat DUI violators who then have a DUI involving a death are being charged in the 1st degree. I am aware of one person who received the death penalty for a DUI death. I an not a proponent of the death penalty, but I am glad DUI is not being aggressively prosecuted. But, I wish the pursuit would be of the high offenders, the mindset here(at least in some communities) seems to be to turn it into another cash cow for the guvmint.....with overaggressive enforcement at the lower end ( high fines, "community service" counseling,...which drums up more work for the 'connected' while the multiple repeat offenders seem to be able to get away with it time and again. (one of my dock neighbors is a cop on a DUI unit) "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... This situation won't change until more prosecutors are prepared to charge violators with murder instead of manslaughter, and put them away for LONG periods of time. I'm aware of one case where this worked (for automobile DWI). Just one. I'm sure it's rare. |
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