Showing posts with label drunk driving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drunk driving. Show all posts

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Hines Ward arrested for drunk driving

Oh, I wish he hadn't done that. I'm now torn between my strong liking of Hines Ward as a great role model for people of mixed Korean descent and an all-around great guy (and a snazzy dancer), and my intense dislike of drunk drivers.

From the Los Angeles Times:
Hines Ward is facing a DUI charge after being arrested on suspicion of drunk driving early Saturday morning in Georgia, according to sheriff’s officials there.

No more Mr Clean?
The Steelers star turned "Dancing With the Stars" champ was booked at 3:41 a.m. at DeKalb County Jail near Atlanta and later released on $1,300 bond (though according to the sheriff’s website it was $1,000).

Ward, 35, is a former Super Bowl MVP -- he has two Super Bowl rings -- and four-time Pro Bowl selection. He started his career in 1998 when he was drafted in the third round out of Georgia.

In May, Ward was held at gunpoint by police in Los Angeles in what turned out to be a mix-up over whether the car he was riding in was a stolen vehicle. It wasn't, and the wide receiver didn't make a big deal about it after the fact. "The police were just doing their job," he said on Twitter. "Apologies were made and it's now in the past."

The Pittsburgh Steelers hadn't yet publicly commented on the wide receiver's arrest. Paperwork has moved along from the sheriff’s office to the courts.
Like with the actors on Lost (I'm looking at you Daniel Dae Kim and Michelle Rodriguez), I'll probably have to force myself to re-like him again. Hate the sin but love the sinner and all that.

I do wonder what his blood alcohol level was. I'm also surprised that I missed that whole being-held-at-gunpoint story in May.

UPDATE:
Over at ROK Drop, GI Korea wonders if Mr Ward is having a midlife crisis.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Bringing the hammer down on drunk drivers

In Orange County, perhaps the most talked-about recent story is that of Ashton Sweet, the fourteen-year-old Irvine cheerleader who was killed after the car she was riding in was smashed into by a drunk driver at around 1 a.m. on May 29.

The Orange County Register has been covering this story for days. Her parents said six people received her donated organs, and yesterday a thousand people turned out for her funeral.

Jeffrey Farley, who was driving the vehicle that hit Ashton's, has been charged with murder (he is pleading not guilty). Here's the thing: the twenty-six-year-old already had a plea of misdemeanor drunken driving from June 2009, and in 2005 he pleaded guilty to refusing to take a chemical test while his license was suspended, which is a DUI-related offense.

Quite the winner, our Mr Farley. Anyone who reads Monster Island regularly knows how I feel about drunk driving. In this particular case, two questions come to mind: Not only why was this man allowed to drive at all, but why wasn't he in jail?

We can't successfully fight drunk driving if we have linguini legislation that doesn't keep repeat drunk drivers out of the driver's seat. What does it take? Some thought that requiring breathalyzers to start the car would work, but that hasn't been implemented very thoroughly. Suspending licenses only goes so far, as a drunk driver can still illegally drive, so that route requires tough penalties for those caught — at traffic stops, sobriety checkpoints, etc. — driving while their license is suspended.

If all else fails, longer prison terms should be the go-to punishment. When will the courts see that many of these drunk drivers are future killers just waiting for the right moment?

It seems that the authorities in Korea are finally getting the message. Courtesy of 조엘, the latest guest blogger at The Marmot's Hole, we are getting news of stricter punishments for driving under the influence that will go into effect in six months:

For the first offense:
  • BAL of 0.05% to 0.10%: up to 6 months in prison, with fines up to 3 million won
  • BAL of 0.10% to 0.20%: 6 months to 1 year in prison, with fines of 3 to 5 million won
  • BAL of 0.20% and above: 1 to 3 years in prison, with fines of 5 to 10 million won
  • Refusing to take the sobriety test will land you in prison for 1 to 3 years, plus a five of 5 to 10 million won (on par with the highest level of inebriation, lest you think refusing to be tested will reduce the severity of the punishment).
For a second offense:

  • Punishment will be the same as the first violation.

For the third offense:
  • 1 to 3 years in prison, with fines of 5 to 10 million won
Maybe I'm a little sensitive to this because I have been hit twice by drunk drivers in Korea and once in California (see here). Knock on wood, I haven't yet been hit by a drunk driver in Hawaii (though the sober drivers would give them a run for their money). In the two Korea cases, had the driver snot hit my car, they might easily have hit a pedestrian later (both were in or near residential areas at a time of high foot traffic). In the California case, the guy nearly killed me as he fled the scene in his car with my bike lodged beneath it.

As with other attempts to curb drunk driving, these new rules may give cover to those who wish not to binge drink when out with the boss or their classmates. It's not foolproof, of course, as the ubiquitous taeri unjŏn (대리운전, designated driver services) can keep you drunk and off the road at the same time. But whatever the case, I have hope that this, too, will lead to a downward trend in drunk driving accidents and fatalities.


Saturday, May 7, 2011

Batting 0.20

Are there any well-known Korean celebrities in America who don't get arrested for DUI?

Our latest (the last one I can actually remember is Daniel Dae Kim, here in Hawaii back when "Lost" was still on the air, so maybe I'm exaggerating the frequency in my head) is Cleveland Indians star Choo Shin-soo.



The newscaster says that Mr Choo was confused about his left and right during the sobriety test but, um, that's not so uncommon for many Korean learners of English. God help us if every Korean tourist to America gets accused of being drunk because they can't follow the directions the cop is giving them (or because their paused English makes them sound inebriated).

Mr Choo apparently also thought an arrest — his blood alcohol level was 0.20, four times what it is in South Korea and 2.5 times what it is in Ohio — would mean deportation.

His arrest is only the latest involving a Big League baseball player, and this has prompted Major League Baseball to look into whether they should be doing something about this:
Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association reportedly have discussed implementing an alcohol policy as part of the new Collective Bargaining Agreement currently being negotiated.

Six Major League players have been arrested for allegedly drinking and driving this calendar year -- including two in recent weeks. While those incidents have brought the issue to the forefront, several reports this week suggest a program to address problems with alcohol abuse has been a discussion point between MLB and the union for some time now.

Currently, there is no specific system of punishment from the league if a player is arrested for driving under the influence one or more times, nor is there a league-operated treatment program for alcohol abuse.
Anyone who knows me knows I have a deep-seated hatred of drunk drivers. It only angers me more when celebrities are let off the hook in part because they are famous. I don't know what will happen, but if Mr Choo somehow gets off with a slap on the wrist for driving with a 0.20% BAL, I hope he realizes he needs rehab and/or a chauffeur.