Monday, May 12, 2008

Andrea Gerdon Killed. Repeat DUI Offender Danny Ruiz Makes a Bad Decision to Drink and Drive... AGAIN.

May 08, 2008
Vol. 3, Issue 19, May 8-14
By Jonathan VolzkeSan Clemente Times

A pregnant woman (and mother) was killed Saturday when a Chevy Blazer slammed into a palm tree, and authorities arrested the driver on suspicion of drunk driving, just four months after he pleaded guilty to another DUI.















Andrea Gerdon, 33. Mom and mother to be.

Authorities said that the woman who died, Andrea Gerdon, 33, of Anaheim, was pregnant.

Danny Calvin Ruiz, 35, was being held on $1 million bail after the wreck, on Camino de Estrella at the Dana Point-San Clemente border. Orange County Superior Court records show Ruiz has a long history of serious run-ins with the law: In 1991, he pleaded guilty to robbery and car theft and was sentenced to two years in state prison. In 1995, he was convicted of carjacking and sentenced to 10 years in prison. He was also found to be a habitual criminal.




















In November 2007, Ruiz was arrested on suspicion of misdemeanor driving under the influence and of driving with a blood-alcohol limit above the state’s legal limit of .08. In that case, he pleaded guilty in January and was sentenced to five days in jail, ordered to pay a $390 fine, ordered to participate in a three-month “first offender alcohol program,” a Mothers Against Drunk Driving victims’ impact panel and was placed on three years probation.

But he was arrested again on Saturday, after a truck jumped the curb and hit a tree while heading west on Camino de Estrella, just east of the San Diego Freeway. Ruiz and Gerdon were both pinned in the vehicle. She was pronounced dead at the scene. Sheriff’s spokesperson Jim Amormino said Tuesday that Gerdon was less than 20 weeks pregnant.

Ruiz suffered moderate to serious injuries and was taken to UCI Medical Center in Orange. He was placed under arrest for suspicion of drunken driving, authorities said.

Transportation officials on Monday worked to replace the signal controller on Estrella near the freeway. Stoplights blinked red, while stop signs had been placed in the street. A small memorial of candles had been placed at the base of the palm tree the Blazer struck before flipping.

Because Ruiz is in the hospital, he will not be arraigned, or asked to enter a plea, until he recovers. A deputy is standing guard. Gerdon’s pregnancy could lead to an additional manslaughter charge, Amormino said.

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Friday, May 9, 2008

Michael Gagnon Found Guilty for Killing Mom and 4 Kids

Driver found guilty in crash that killed 5 in Ohio
May 9, 2008


TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — A man has been found guilty in a wrong-way crash in Toledo, Ohio that killed a mother and four children.

Police say Michael Gagnon was driving drunk and in the wrong direction Dec. 30 when his pickup truck hit a minivan filled with eight people returning from a Christmas trip.



















Police say Gagnon's blood-alcohol level was more than twice the legal limit.

Gagnon has pleaded no contest. He was found guilty Friday of aggravated vehicular homicide and aggravated vehicular assault and faces up to 50 years in prison.

Earlier News Report:

TOLEDO, Ohio — A man accused of killing a woman and four children in a wrong-way crash on an interstate while he was drunk is distraught over the deaths, said an attorney speaking for the man's family.

Michael Gagnon, 24, kept his head bowed and said little in court Wednesday during his first appearance since the crash on Sunday that killed five members of a family returning home from a holiday trip.
















Toledo Municipal Court Judge Michael Goulding set bond at $1.25 million for five counts of aggravated vehicular homicide.

Gagnon, who still has a cut across his chin, spoke with attorney Rick Sanders on Tuesday while in jail.

"He couldn't believe this had happened," Sanders said. "He's distraught for the situation he's in. He's distraught that people are dead."

Police said tests showed Gagnon, of Adrian, Mich., had a blood-alcohol level more than three times the legal limit when he drove his pickup truck in the wrong direction on Interstate 280.














Gagnon drove about four miles before his pickup truck slammed into the minivan filled with six children and a husband and wife who had spent Christmas with their family in Michigan.

Killed were Bethany Griffin, 36; Vadi Griffin, 2 months; Lacie Burkman, 7; and Haley Burkman, 10, all from Parkville, Md.

Jordan Griffin, 10; who lived with her mother in Redford Township, Mich., also died. Her father, Danny Griffin Jr., 36, who lives in Parkville, and two other children were injured.

About a dozen members of Gagnon's family filled the first two rows of the courtroom during Wednesday's brief hearing. His mother and father, from Muskegon, Mich., sat in the front.

Their attorney said they wanted to say that their thoughts and prayers are with the victims of the crash and their family.

"They don't know what happened," Sanders said of Gagnon's relatives. "They're understandably upset. They're good people."

They left the courtroom in tears and did not want to talk.

Gagnon said during the hearing that he could not afford an attorney because he was a self-employed construction worker.

The judge said a public defender would be appointed for Gagnon.

Gagnon had his driver's license suspended multiple times for not providing proof of insurance or registration.

He also had two speeding tickets since 2002 but had no points on his driving record before Sunday's crash, according to the Michigan secretary of state's office.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Weak Laws Allow Illegal Immigrants to Kill and Kill Again

Illegal Immigrant Kills Pedestrian Week After Given Probation


If Luciano Melendres had been deported to Mexico following his 2006 arrest for driving drunk – or even if a judge last week hadn't suspended his six-month jail sentence and given him 12 months probation – Dacus Lamont Sims, 32, would be alive today.






Luciano Melendres







As it is, Melendres is back in jail for a second offense, this time charged with DWI, felony hit-and-run, driving with a license revoked, not having insurance and a registration violation, the Charlotte, North Carolina, Observer reported.

Sims, who was hit while crossing a Charlotte street earlier this week, died at the scene.

Melendres continued to a friend's home and was found because a driver who saw the accident followed his car and contacted police. The illegal alien, who has lived and worked in North Carolina for at least 13 months, denied involvement when questioned by officers.

"Why do they let this man constantly drive?" asked Joset Sims, the victim's sister. "If this gentleman is an illegal immigrant, and he was charged with DWI, why did they not deport him?"

When Melendres was arrested for the first offense in March 2006, the Mecklenburg County Sheriff's Office had not yet instituted detainee screening to determine whether prisoners were in the U.S. illegally, resulting in his release. It is unclear whether the court was aware of his status as an illegal alien when it suspended his jail sentence last week and released him on probation.

The sheriff's new screening program identified more than 900 illegal immigrants passing through the jail between April and November last year. DWIs – the most common count – accounted for 190 of the arrests. Traffic violations, in second place, totaled 176 counts.

WND has reported on the growing list of illegal immigrants who have not only ignored U.S. immigration laws, but state laws against drinking and driving as well, killing innocents on the highways in the process, including:


AlfredoRamos: A Mexican national in the U.S. illegally, Ramos was convicted of driving while intoxicated last year, but that didn't keep him from being behind the wheel after a night of drinking last weekend – and now two teenage girls are dead because of it. According to police, Ramos, 22, slammed the 1998 Mitsubishi he was driving into the rear of a 1994 Plymouth driven by Allison Kunhardt, 17, Friday night in Virginia Beach, Va. Kunhardt and her best friend Tessa Tranchant, 16, were stopped at a traffic light when they were hit from behind. Although both wore seat belts, both died – one at the scene and one after arriving at the hospital. Ramos, charged with manslaughter for the two deaths, was convicted last year of public drunkenness in Virginia Beach and driving under the influence in Chesapeake.


Carlos Prieto: Suspected illegal alien from Mexico was held in the Salt Lake County jail after running a red light and broad siding a family of six, killing three, on Christmas Eve 2006. The charging documents say his blood-alcohol level was above the legal limit. The Ceran family, active in local theater and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, were returning home after attending a performance of Dicken's "The Christmas Carol," which featured several family members, when their car was struck by a truck driven by Carlos Prieto. The crash killed Cheryl Ceran, 47, and two of her children, 15-year-old Ian and 7-year-old Julinna. Cheryl Ceran's husband, Gary Ceran, 45, and their 19-year-old daughter, Clarissa, and 12-year-old son, Caleb, were injured.

Eduardo Raul Morales-Soriano: When this illegal alien, working as a landscaper in Maryland, killed Marine Cpl. Brian Mathews, 21, and his date, Jennifer Bower, 24, on Thanksgiving night, 2006, it wasn't his first accident where alcohol was apparently involved. Nine months before, he was issued four citations and sent home with a friend after a single-car accident when he refused a Breathalyzer test. A policeman's error resulted in Morales-Soriano – who took advantage of North Carolina's easy rules to obtain his driver's license in 2004 – getting his license returned. On the night he killed the young couple, police say his blood alcohol level was measured at .32 – four times the legal level in Maryland for intoxication. Mathews had served 8 months in Iraq and completed another tour of duty in the Pacific.

Guillermo Paniagua: This 29-year-old Mexican construction worker, living in the U.S. illegally, already had 4 DUI arrests when he slammed his pickup, head-on, into the car driven by Needville, Texas, Independent School District Chief of Police Ernie Mendoza on Jan. 19, 2007. Mendoza died instantly and Paniagua, suffering only cuts and bruises, fled the accident scene into the night. The police officer left behind a wife and four children. Paniagua now he faces first-degree felony murder charges, and failure to stop and render aid.

Gustavo Reyes Garcia: Fourteen previous arrests – including four DUIs – didn't keep illegal alien Gustavo Reyes Garcia off the road June 8, 2006, when he slammed his SUV into a sedan driven by Sean and Donna Wilson of Mt. Juliet, Tenn., killing them both. Garcia short-circuited the criminal trial for two counts of vehicular homicide while intoxicated and evading arrest by pleading guilty on April 9, 2007. "It was the case that brought to our attention ... the flaw in the system," Davidson County Sheriff Daron Hall said.

Hector Velazquez-Nava: This 24-year-old Mexican national living in Los Angeles reportedly had a 0.24 percent blood-alcohol level – three times the state level to be considered drunk – about the time he drove his SUV head on into a car driven by 'A Christmas Story' director Bob Clark, killing him and his 22-year-old son at the scene. Velazquez-Nava was arrested for investigation of driving under the influence of alcohol and vehicular manslaughter for the April 4, 2007, accident. According to reports, Velazquez-Nava didn't have any previous deportations but had been convicted in 2004 in Los Angeles of soliciting a prostitute, for which he received 24 months probation and a $1,500 fine after pleading no contest.

Isidro Pena Soto: Passing on one of Northern California's most deadly highways, Soto slammed head on into the pickup truck driven by Kent Boone, a 32-year-old pipe fitter on his way to work and father of five. Pena, who had been arrested or convicted at least nine times since 2003, has been charged with second-degree murder.

Joel Perea and Maurilio Herrera: Police took this death hard – it was one of their own. Deputy Loren Lilly, who had been with the Cobb County Sheriff's Office for 18 years, was pronounced dead at the scene after his Honda Accord flipped several times after being struck by a Ford Taurus driven by Perea. "Obviously, being in law enforcement, none of us wants to roll up and see one of our fellow officers or deputies on the scene as well," said one cop. 27-year-old Perea and his passenger, Herrera, 23 fled the scene before being captured.

Jorge Humberto Hernandez-Soto: Police say was driving more than 100 mph on the wrong side of Interstate 485 when he collided head-on with the car of 18-year-old Min Soon Chang, a freshman from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, killing him. According to authorities, the illegal alien had already been sent back to Mexico 17 times and convicted of impaired driving at least a couple of times before the November 2005 crash.

Jose Trejo Encino: The 27-year-old illegal alien from Mexico admitted to deputies, at the scene of the November 2006 single car accident that killed one of his passengers and injured another, "to drinking a 12-pack of beer earlier in the night," but not before first trying to throw the cans of beer he still had in his car into the woods before police arrived.

Luis Oscar Garcia: Police said Garcia had a strong odor of alcohol on his person and that his pants were soaked with a liquid that indicated the presence of alcohol when he ran a red light and killed 18-year-old James F. Rogers Jr. of North Jackson, Tenn., in August 2006. The 24-year-old Mexican had been living in the U.S. without a green card for three years.

Marcos Ramos Medina: The 35-year-old Mexican had twice been deported when, on Aug. 4, 2005, his car swerved several times across the center line, causing a tractor-trailer rig to jackknife in Yakima, Wash. His car then plowed head-on into the 2000 Lexus driven by Peggy Keller, 53, dean of distance education at Yakima Valley Community College, killing her at the scene. Medina, who was found to have at least eight aliases and falsely identified himself at his first court appearance, escaped serious injury. The case against the Mexican national was declared a mistrial in August 2006 because his constitutional right to remain silent had been violated. It took a second jury only 30 minutes to find Medina guilty three months later.

Miguel Garduno Gonzalez: The 43-year-old was accused of causing an accident near Lakeland, Fla., on Aug. 2, 2006, that left Haines City police officer Phoenix Braithwaite, 24, dead. Gonzalez was driving a van that while passing two trucks on U.S. 17-92 in Osceola County near the Polk County line hit the officer, who was on his way to work. Braithwaite, who was riding his motorcycle, was hit head-on and died at the scene. Gonzalez, an illegal immigrant, was not hurt and fled the scene. Two passengers in the van also were not hurt also are illegal immigrants. Gonzalez was being held without bail and the two others were held as material witnesses.

Pastor Rios Sanchez: Despite having pleaded guilty to driving without a license in 2005, and similar counts in March and April of 2006, Sanchez was still on the road on Oct. 27, 2006, when he crossed the yellow line near Sanford, N.C., and collided head-on with a stationwagon carrying Helen Meghan Hughes, 22, of Summerville, S.C., Jennifer Carter, 18, of Jacksonville, N.C., and Hughes' stepbrother, 16-year-old Ben Leonard. All three were killed. The 55-year-old illegal alien was allegedly drunk and carrying a forged residency card.

Ramiro Gallegos: In July 2005, Gallegos had already been charged on three separate occasions with drunk driving. His fourth offence caused the death of Scott Gardiner of Mount Holly, N.C., a father of two young children, when the Mexican citizen's truck struck Gardner's station wagon as he drove his family to the coast for vacation.

Vitalina Bautista Vargas: Neighbors of Louella Winton said the van driven by Vargas, an illegal alien from Mexico, never slowed down before plowing through Winton's home, knocking the 91-year-old woman, who had been asleep in bed, against the wall of the house next door and leaving her under the vehicle outside the house. Winton died of complications from her injuries.

Little caution, critics say, is being exercised when it comes to preventing mayhem on America's highways as the country witnesses record high numbers of unlicensed, unregistered, uninsured drivers – millions of whom are illegal aliens.

While no one – in or out of government – tracks traffic accidents caused by illegal aliens, the statistical and anecdotal evidence suggests many of last year's 42,636 road deaths involved illegal aliens.

A report by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Study found 20 percent of fatal accidents involve at least one driver who lacks a valid license. In California, another study showed that those who have never held a valid license are about five times more likely to be involved in a fatal road accident than licensed drivers.

Statistically, that makes them an even greater danger on the road than drivers whose licenses have been suspended or revoked – and nearly as dangerous as drunk drivers.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

6-time DUI Offender Ignacio Merendon-Zerega Kills Woman

Published: May 6, 2008
By PAUL DAQUILANTEOf the News-Register

Exasperated authorities may finally have found a solution to Ignacio Merendon-Zerega's penchant for getting behind the wheel drunk and paying no heed to anyone who gets in his way.

The 44-year-old illegal immigrant will spend the next 15 years in the state prison system, then be deported to his native Mexico.

However, it's too late for the Cox family of Newberg. Judyth Ann Cox died in December - leaving her husband of 48 years, 72-year-old Craig, a widower - after Merendon, in a drunken stupor, crashed his Dodge Caravan into their Geo Storm.

About 2 1/2 hours after the crash, Merendon's blood alcohol content still measured .347. That's more than four times the .08 establishing the presumption on impairment in Oregon.

According to statements in court, the Woodburn resident started his day by mixing 10 shots of tequila with his morning coffee, then switched to beer. Thus fortified, he got behind the wheel and took off, driving with a suspended license.

And it was apparently something he had done many times before.

Merendon's record shows six previous drunken driving convictions. It shows a hit and run conviction from a DUII crash in which he registered a blood alcohol content of .29 - almost four times the legal limit. It shows repeated license suspensions and revocations, coupled with a previous deportation to Mexico.

But nothing seemed to stop him. After the deportation, he returned to the U.S., returned to the bottle and returned to the road, records show.

Before Yamhill County Circuit Judge Cal Tichenor sentenced him Monday on one count each of first-degree manslaughter, fourth-degree assault, driving while suspended and felony driving under the influence, Merendon told the court, "I'm sorry." But prosecutor Alicia Eagan said he showed no remorse at all at the crash scene.

Eagan said he climbed from his van, leaned against it and lit a cigarette. When informed 66-year-old Judy Cox had succumbed to her injuries, she said, he reportedly responded, "She shouldn't have died. It wasn't that big of a crash."

She said several witnesses reported seeing Merendon weaving all over the road shortly before the crash, alternately crossing the center line and fog line.

"He was drunk, very, very drunk," she told the court. "One officer said he was visibly, obviously intoxicated."

At one point, a fellow motorist rolled down his window and yelled at Merendon, "Get off the road before you kill someone," Eagan said. And minutes later, the unheeding Woodburn resident did just that.

If a murder case could ever be made as a result of a DUII crash, Eagan said, this would be the one.

Tichenor seconded that.

"You deliberately killed another human being," he told Merendon as he pronounced sentence under terms of a plea bargain. "You showed no regard for the life of that woman or the lives of anyone else."

Under Oregon sentencing guidelines, Merendon could have gotten as much as 20 years, Eagan said. However, that would have required taking the case to trial, instead of negotiating a plea bargain under which counts of reckless driving and recklessly endangering another were dropped.

"Potentially, he could have gotten 20," she said. "Had we gone to trial and won, and with enhancement factors, I think we could have gotten the 20. But I wasn't going to put the family through a trial."

For members of the family, who filled two rows in the courtroom Monday, the sentencing hearing was a difficult emotional ordeal in its own right.

Cox's daughter, Vicki Peterson, submitted a letter in which she told Tichenor her mother had suffered a permanent brain injury 25 years earlier at the hands of another drunken driver. She told him a family friend had died in that crash.

Retired First Baptist Church Pastor Bernie Taylor of McMinnville, a longtime friend of the Cox family, read the letter on Peterson's behalf as Eagan offered her emotional support.
Peterson said her mom was her best friend. She was an incredible woman whose philosophy was to make the world around you a better place just by being in it.

Laughter was her signature. She found humor whenever she could.

Peterson said she considered herself the luckiest daughter in the world to have had Judy Cox for her mother.

She called Cox an amazing mother-in-law to her husband and an amazing grandmother to her children. Now they all are left with a huge hole and struggling with the senselessness of this tragedy, she said.

Peterson said her parents' marriage was filled with love and strength. It was an inspiration to all. Now she watches her dad carry on alone and it's heart wrenching to see the pain and loneliness he is having to endure.

"It is incomprehensible that this could happen twice to our family," Peterson said, referring back to a March 1980 crash that left her then 39-year-old mother hospitalized for three months.

She said her mom had to have a vega nerve stimulator implant to control her seizures, and still had to take anti-seizure medication the rest of her life. But she said Cox had been doing especially well in the months before the December crash in Newberg.

"She was feeling better than she had since the first crash," Peterson said. "My parents finally had gotten to the point where they could retire and travel to do and see all they wanted to. Ignacio Merendon-Zerega had no right to take that away."

Keith Swanson, a Salem attorney, read a letter from Craig Cox.

He said words weren't sufficient to describe the 48 years they had together. He said there were difficult times, but they worked hard to overcome them.

"Now it's over forever," he said. "This man killed my wife and me. This is a life sentence for me, and he only will get 15 years. I am more alone now than any time of my life."

He said his daughter and son lost the love of their life and their best friend, as he did. He said Merendon "ripped our hearts out."

"I can't even talk about it without crying," Cox said. "All our grandchildren are suffering more than I can say. She won't be there for Christmas or birthdays or any other family get togethers."
Letters were also submitted by Vicki Peterson's husband, Sam; Sam and Vicki's daughter, Hannah; Sam's sister, Judy; cousins Pat Williams and Paul Kinser; and other family members. Turner also submitted a letter, as did Judy Cox's long-time friend, Judy Newton.

Sam Peterson said Merendon had left a black hole in all their hearts - one that would never be filled.

"I'm sorry I couldn't come to court, but I can't see him," Hannah Peterson said. "I can't see the scum who murdered my grandma. I can't. I don't want to.

"Please don't let him hurt anyone else. Please. No one deserves to feel like this."

Eagan said, "Before this hearing, I chose to read all these letters rather than focus on the reports of the crash. I feel as thought I know her. This was a lovely woman."

Monday, May 5, 2008

Shawn Burritt, Repeat DUI Offender Kills 18 Year Old Nicholas Fournier


By Lisa Rathke
Associated Press Writer

BURLINGTON, Vt.—A repeat drunk driver who killed a Franklin County teenager in a wrong-way crash on Interstate 89 last year was sentenced Monday to 10 to 20 years in prison.

In a court room filled with the victim's family and friends, Shawn Burritt, 33, of Jericho pleaded guilty to driving under the influence, causing a fatality, and leaving the scene of a crash. Three other charges were dropped as part of the plea deal.






Nicholas Fournier, 18
Killed by a Drunk Driver









On Nov. 17, Burritt -- who lost his driver's license for life after three drunken driving convictions -- drove the wrong way on the interstate and plowed his car into one carrying Nicholas Fournier, 18, of West Swanton.

Burritt had admitted to having eight to nine beers at a Colchester bar, with his last about 30 minutes before the crash.

Through tears, Fournier's mother told Burritt the loss of her son meant a lifetime without parole from her grief.

"You killed our son ... You took our future," Cathy Fournier said.

Describing Nick Fournier as a loving, fun person, who played by the rules, family and friends, who have rallied at the Statehouse for tougher drunken driving laws, accused Burritt of disrespecting laws and having no remorse.

Some pleaded with Judge Linda Leavitt for a longer minimum sentence to send a message to drunken drivers.

"I don't want to see people suffering like we're suffering. I don't want to see people like Nick not in this world," said Earl Fournier, Nick's uncle.

But Leavitt accepted the plea deal which she said she understood the family supported. Before doing so, she asked Burritt to respond to the family's accusations.

"This is such a horrible event that you've created," Leavitt said. "I hope something good will come out of this ... The life you took was so precious to so many."

Burritt apologized to the family, saying he had been an alcoholic since he was 18, and tried to stop drinking many times. He told the judge that after being convicted of drunken driving, he would remain sober for several years but start drinking again with friends. When asked what might have prevented that, he said more jail time.

"I hope there will be more laws and programs to prevent tragedies like this from happening again," he said.

Chittenden County State's Attorney T.J. Donovan called the plea deal a fair and appropriate solution, but acknowledged that it may not be sufficient for the victim's family.

"These are terrible, terrible tragic cases," he said. "It's never enough."

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Repeat Drunk Driving Remains a Problem

Eight-time DUI Offender Kills Four

May 03, 2008
CURTIS JOHNSON
The Herald

Repeat offenders consistently account for a substantial portion of the overall drunken driving problem, and many believe reversing the trend will take increased public pressure on the court system and legislative action.

An April 17, 2008 vehicle crash in Wayne County underscored the problem. Investigators charged a repeat drunken driver with stealing a vehicle, driving it into West Virginia, crossing the center line and hitting another truck head on.

Click here for a look at DUI offender data

The crash killed John Michael Boone, 28, of Kenova, and his two children, Jordan Micheal, 3, and Michael Tyler, 2. The father's friend, Thomas "Reno" Hardwick of Fort Gay, also died in the crash.








Father, daughter, son and
friend killed by 8-time
offender Bobby Frazier.

Bobby's most recent
punishment was a fine
and 30 days in jail.





Investigators charged Bobby Frazier, 47, of Louisa, Ky., with being intoxicated at the time. Frazier had at least eight prior drunken driving arrests in Kentucky, and his most recent punishment was a fine and 30 days in jail.

The victims' families are pushing for stronger drunken driving laws. Charles Hardwick said the current system let his family down, and Tronnie Boone said there must be a stopping point to keep repeat offenders from getting behind the wheel. Both men are fathers of the oldest victims.

"The courts are going to have to realize they are letting these people out and giving them too many chances to kill families," Tronnie Boone said.

But stopping drunken drivers is a complex issue. Sometimes prison may be the only way to keep a repeat offender from getting behind the wheel in a society that talks tough against drunken driving but too often excuses it as a human mistake when a loved one or acquaintance is arrested.

Joyce Abbott, the manager of driver improvement for the West Virginia Division of Motor Vehicles, said apathy leads to a lack of public pressure on a system already faced with prison overcrowding and increased criminal caseloads.

"It's not treated seriously enough, early enough," she said. "Instead of treating it like the criminal act that it is, it is treated more like a social ill instead of the possibility of hurting and maiming someone."

Statistics reveal a problem

Repeat offenders account for nearly one-third of all drunken driving arrests, according to national and local statistics. That concerns traffic safety advocates.

"It bothers me when I see someone that has had five, six or seven arrests because I know that they have been drinking and driving more than those five or six times," said Larry Kendall, who is the regional coordinator for the Governor's Highway Safety Program. "No one gets arrested every time they're drinking and driving."

In Cabell County, repeat drunken driving violations accounted for 30 percent of all DUI warrants filed in Magistrate Court between 2004 and 2007. Abbott said repeat offenders accounted for about 20 percent of the agency's DUI revocations between fiscal years 2005 and 2007.

Statistics from the state Division of Motor Vehicles also indicate a drunken driver is far more likely to have his license revoked in West Virginia than be criminally convicted of driving under the influence. The agency revoked 38,198 driver's licenses between fiscal years 2004 and 2007. That is compared with 17,118 drunken driving convictions during the same time period.

Abbott said the disparity proves the administrative court system is doing its job in revoking licenses, but the state's criminal justice system is struggling to effectively prosecute and convict those same offenders.

The discrepancy also can be attributed criminal prosecutors having to meet a higher burden of proof, delays in prosecuting each case and some courts simply not reporting their convictions to the state agency.

Donna Hawkins, state director of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, said her group believes the state's drunken driving laws are strong enough. She said the state needs a criminal justice system to apply those laws, instead of reducing charges and granting plea bargains.
"The general public, in survey after survey, clearly says to get the drunk drivers, particularly the repeat offenders off the road," she said.

Almost half of the felony drunken driving cases filed during 2005 and 2007 in Cabell County were reduced to misdemeanor charges in magistrate court, according to a review of court records by The Herald-Dispatch. The review discovered most every offender pleaded guilty to the lesser charge.

Numbers from the state Division of Corrections indicate a similar problem. The agency's 2007 Annual Report states 92 prisoners were being held on a third-offense DUI conviction as of June 30, 2007.

That equates to 1.6 prisoners per county. The possible sentence for third-offense DUI is one to three years in prison.

The need for public pressure

The lack of evidence, cost of incarceration and large caseloads can lead to criminal charges being reduced. Safety advocates believe those forces can be fought when strong public pressure is applied to prosecutors and judges.

Wayne County Sheriff David Pennington was among several people who mentioned MADD's success when the group used to monitor courtrooms in the area.

"With that pressure, I remember some of the magistrates saying 'Don't do that. We've got Mothers Against Drunk Drivers sitting out there in the courtroom,'" he said.

MADD is currently rebuilding its presence in West Virginia, and that is welcome news to Abbott, Kendall and other safety advocates. They said the group's efforts are largely responsible for pushing state lawmakers to pass strong laws several years ago.

Now those laws need to be enforced, and Kendall said public pressure will ensure that happens.
"If the public knows what is going on in a courtroom, there probably would be more accountability," he said. "That public interest and that public concern needs to be raised again."
Hawkins said the success of those initiatives largely depends upon volunteers stepping forward to provide time and financial support.

But an endless amount of public pressure will not stop all charges from being reduced, according to area prosecutors and circuit judges.

Cabell's Chief Circuit Judge Alfred Ferguson said nobody likes plea bargaining, but he believes it can be a necessity. That is especially true at the magistrate level in larger counties.

"What if they started asking for a jury trial in every one of those cases?" he questioned. "It would come to a screeching halt. There is just no way it could be done. ... It's up to the powers that be to pick out which cases they really want to go forward with and really be hard-nosed with."

The strength of a case also can force a charge to be reduced. For instance, Ferguson said the blood alcohol level could be very close to the legal limit thus causing concern about a potential conviction.

Other reasons include the failure of witnesses to appear in court and differences in the reporting of crime between jurisdiction.

"The reasons are numerous," Cabell Circuit Judge John Cummings said. "What may be illegal in one jurisdiction may not be a crime, or the same crime, in another."

That is especially true in border counties, according to Wayne County Prosecutor Jim Young. He said the evidence needed to support a crime in Kentucky or Ohio may not match the elements of a crime in the Mountain State.

Young, Ferguson and Cummings said researching a prior charge can be a chore. Authorities can use a national crime database to research one's past, but finding that information is only doable when the prior offense is entered by the other jurisdiction. The database may be incomplete, but Young and Ferguson said it can point investigators in the right direction.

Inaccurate information about someone's record also can lead to the wrong charge being filed at the time of an arrest. That forces the prosecutor to reduce the charge at a later date, Cabell County Prosecutor Chris Chiles said.

For example, a prior drunken driving charge only counts as a repeat offense if it occurred in the past 10 years. That exemption led to a New Year's Day, third-offense arrest being reduced in 2007.

Chiles and Young said agreeing to a reduced charge may benefit the state in some instances. The lesser charge may allow longer monitoring on home confinement than a jail sentence. For example, some repeat offenders have been transferred to work release after serving less than a year behind bars because of overcrowding within the state's prisons.

Whatever the reason, the court officials said reducing a charge from first-offense to second-offense does not eliminate the possibility of a third-offense felony charge when the next incident occurs.

Every plea agreement must be approved by a judge, and most decisions about DUI cases are made by county magistrates in West Virginia. They are only required to have a high school diploma, which means they have the least amount of experience when considering a plea agreement supported by a prosecutor and defense attorney.

"I know justice is not done in every case," Ferguson said. "I've been watching the magistrate court system. There are a lot of problems with the magistrate system."

Some will not stop drinking and driving

The toughest of punishments will not always stop a person from drinking and driving.
For instance, prosecutors were forced to seek a life sentence for a Cabell County man under the state's three-felony-strikes-and-you're-out law. Their efforts followed the arrest of Thomas Talbert. He was arrested Sept. 10, 2005, two days after he was released from prison on a prior conviction. It was his eighth drunken driving arrest since May 1992.

Cummings called it a sociological problem, and Ferguson said it is something he has dealt with at many sentencing hearings.

"If you're an alcoholic you can drink at home," Ferguson said in recalling what he tells defendants. "You can pass out. You can throw up. You can make your family miserable. You can get cirrhosis of the liver. You can die at an early age. You can do that all you want to, but once you go out and get in a car and you drive off, then you are my problem because you are a danger to society."

Repeat offenders also have a history of not completing the state's mandatory alcohol education and assessment program, according to Abbott and a review by The Herald-Dispatch.

"You cannot force these people into the program," she said. "They have to go into the programs pretty much willingly. There is no real stick or hammer. There is nothing to force these people into these programs."

Many groups, including MADD and the state Division of Motor Vehicles, support ignition interlock programs. It requires a Breathalyzer to be placed on the vehicle. If a person proves to be sober, then the ignition starts and the person can drive.

Hawkins said newer systems require testing during someone's journey. The equipment also can take photos of the testing subject, thus confirming the repeat offender does not have somebody else blowing into the instrument for them.

Abbott said the interlock system requires the offender to participate in the alcohol education and assessment program.

But opponents say a repeat offender can avoid the interlock system altogether by driving another person's vehicle. For instance, police say Frazier stole the vehicle used in the Wayne County crash.

"They only way you're ever going to keep from driving a car frankly is to incarcerate them," Abbott said. "As soon as they get out, it doesn't matter. They are going to drive again. There just really is no easy answer to DUI."

Young and Ferguson said they support longer sentences. Both said they believe lawmakers should increase the minimum, one-year prison term.

"It probably would be more helpful if you had a more severe penalty for more than third-offense. The fourth and fifth or something," he said. "Those that repeat even after having been to prison, there needs to be some other deterrent."

Ferguson also said he is an advocate of determinant sentencing. That would allow a circuit judge to sentence someone to a minimum three years of prison, instead of a one- to three-year window. The current, indeterminate window currently allows prisoners to max out the third-offense sentence in 18 months.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Remembering Christopher Cooper "Coop" - Killed by Drunk Driver Wilfredo Pujols

Remembering Christopher Cooper
Killed at age 17 by a Drunk Driver












Christopher Cooper “Coop” was a junior at Truman High School. He was killed by a drunk driver when a car being chased by police struck his bicycle November, 2007. Wilfredo Pujols was charged with second degree murder, resisting arrest, two counts of leaving the scene of an accident and one count of DWI.

Visit his MySpace Page: http://www.myspace.com/rwtfchriscooper


(from his MySpace page)

His Favorite Things To Do: Skating, biking, spending time with my friends and family, spring break, summer break, camping, music, music, music.

His Heroes: “My heroes are my Mom and Dad, my brother Ryan, my Aunts Stacy and Kim, my cousin Corey, my best friends Stephen and Dylan, all my girls, and all my friends who love and miss me. I am with you always, and I love you.”

"I am now an ethereal angel, and I watch over and guide those who I love and who love me. I will always be with you, and I will be there for you whenever you need me. Do not weep, but if you must, always know that your tears will be swept away by my eternal love for you. Do not stand at my grave and weep, I am not there, I do not sleep. I am in a thousand winds that blow, I am the softly falling snow. I am the gentle showers of rain, I am the fields of ripening grain. I am in the morning hush, I am in the graceful rush Of beautiful birds of circling flight, I am the star-shine of the night. I am in the flowers that bloom, I am in a quiet room. I am in the birds that sing, I am in each lovely thing. Do not stand at my grave and cry, I am not there, I do not die."

Doctoral Student Killed by Drunk Driver Danielle Witherspoon

58-year-old doctoral student killed by drunk driver

By Robert Moran
Inquirer Staff Writer

NEWS VIDEO

Sandra Schinfeld, a Melrose Park woman who was about to earn a doctorate in public health at the age of 58, was killed by a 24-year-old drunk driver early Sunday on North Broad Street in the city's Logan section.



















Her husband, Jay Schinfeld, 60, who practices reproductive medicine, said they were returning from a performance of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater at the Kimmel Center when their car was struck on the passenger side by another vehicle.

Police arrested Danielle Witherspoon, 24, of the 5000 block of North Franklin Street in Olney, at the accident scene near Albert Einstein Medical Center and charged her with involuntary manslaughter and driving under the influence.

The accident occurred at 12:18 a.m. and Mrs. Schinfeld was pronounced dead at Einstein at 3:55 a.m., police said. Her husband was treated for minor injuries.

Mrs. Schinfeld was seeking a doctorate at Temple University while also working at the Jefferson Center for Applied Research on Aging and Health at Thomas Jefferson University and serving as vice president of Congregation Adath Jeshurun in Elkins Park.

"She was a vivacious, ebullient, optimistic, just always upbeat person," said Rabbi Seymour Rosenbloom.

"This senseless act of drunken driving has taken a star from us," he said. "It's inexcusable."
In an e-mail to dozens of students, staff and faculty at Temple, Stephen J. Lepore, professor of public health, said Mrs. Schinfeld had been working in the Social and Behavioral Health Interventions lab and was "an integral part of the investigative team seeking to improve the life of cancer survivors and to reduce disparities in cancer among medically underserved minority populations."

Lepore, director of Ph.D. programs for the Department of Public Health, added: "In many ways, Sandy was like the lab 'mother,' always interested in what everyone was doing, offering a kind word and advice when needed, and constantly bringing in good things to eat."

In an interview yesterday, Lepore said Mrs. Schinfeld was likely to have completed her doctoral work this summer. He has inquired about whether the university can give her a posthumous honorary degree.

"She was getting real close," said her husband, who specializes in reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Abington Memorial Hospital.

Last week, he said, she was up until "1:30 every night" working on her dissertation.

They met 40 years ago while the two attended separate colleges in Connecticut.

The first time he saw her, he said, he told his friends, "I'm going to marry her," which he did four years later.

"To see them at a dance floor at a party," said Rosenbloom, "you could see the chemistry between them."


They raised two sons, Seth and Eric. Mrs. Schinfeld also is survived by her parents, Irv and Roe Gale, and a brother.

Schinfeld said his wife had delayed obtaining a doctorate because "family was her priority."
Laura N. Gitlin, director of the Jefferson Center, said Mrs. Schinfeld pursued her work and studies, as well as volunteerism, because she "was completely involved in the world. She really wanted to make a difference in people's lives."