Jerry Eichenberger
Serious Thumper
   
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2006 S40. OEM windshield, saddle bags, Sportster
Posts: 2919
Columbus, Ohio
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"Drunk" is an interesting concept. What is "drunk" as opposed to "impaired"?
"Drunk" is a media catch word; nothing more.
As I said earlier, we're all impaired to some degree - unless you're the likes of Michael Shumacher or Lewis Hamilton, nobody can really drive.
Truly drunk, to me, is so far slammed that you can't walk straight, can't talk, maybe even can't sit up straight.
Below that is "impaired". All of the way from the .18 guy who runs a stop sign and red light, to the .24 person who can't realize he just entered a freeway up an exit ramp and hits someone head on.
So the problem is that we set a limit, and treat all people above the limit as the same.
My solution would be a graduated limit, with ever incresaing penalties. For a first time offender, I can live with a limit of .08, so long as the penalty is commensurate with a slight impairment one has at that level. Treat this offense like the typical speeding ticket.
Then, maybe around .12, stiffer fine, and maybe a 5 or 10 day license suspension.
Then, at around .15, get serious - heavy fine, 3 to 6 month suspension.
At about .18, get real serious - 10 days (consecutive) in the slammer, very heavy fine, 1 year suspension.
After .20, treat it as a 4th degree felony. 30 days minimum in jail, license suspension of 2+ years.
If an accident is involved with serious injuries, kick each limit up at least one notch on the scale. Each offense after the first one, do the same; kick it up one notch for each time after the first one.
But today, we in Ohio treat all violations the same for a first time offender if he exceeds .08, regardless of how high he was. Stupid.
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