Posts Tagged ‘dui checkpoint’

Middletown DUI Checkpoint, November 4, 2011

November 4th, 2011

OVI Checkpoint tonight in Middletown [full story]. The Middletown Police Department, in conjunction with the Ohio State Highway Patrol and the Butler County DUI Task Force will be conducting an OVI checkpoint tonight from 11pm until 3 am along Rt. 4.  The DUI checkpoint will be augmented with saturation patrols in the surrounding areas targeting potentially impaired drivers. If you plan to drink tonight, please drink responsibly and designate a driver.

DUI attorney Charles M. Rowland II dedicates his practice to defending the accused drunk driver in Middletown, Fairborn, Dayton, Springfield, Kettering, Vandalia, Xenia, Miamisburg, Huber Heights, Beavercreek, Centerville and throughout Ohio.  He has the credentials and the experience to win your case and has made himself the Miami Valley’s choice for DUI defense.  Contact Charles Rowland by phone at 937-318-1DUI (937-318-1384), 937-879-9542, or toll-free at 1-888-ROWLAND (888-769-5263).  For after-hours help contact our 24/7 DUI HOTLINE at 937-776-2671.  For information about Dayton DUI sent directly to your mobile device, text DaytonDUI (one word) to 50500.  Follow DaytonDUI on Twitter@DaytonDUI or Get Twitter updates via SMS by texting DaytonDUI to 40404. DaytonDUI is also available on Facebook,  and on the DaytonDUI channel on YouTube.  You can also email Charles Rowland at: CharlesRowland@DaytonDUI.com or write to us at 2190 Gateway Dr., Fairborn, Ohio 45324.

DUI Checkpoints: Are They Justified (Still)?

November 4th, 2011
Official portrait of Justice William J. Brenna...

U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Sobriety Checkpoints, Michigan v. Sitz, 496 U.S. 444 (1990)

In 1986, the Michigan State Police Department created a sobriety checkpoint program aimed at reducing drunk driving within the state. The program included guidelines governing the location of roadblocks and the amount of publicity to be given to the operation. Before the first roadblock went into effect, Rick Sitz, a licensed Michigan driver, challenged the checkpoints and sought declaratory and injunctive relief. Sitz was victorious in the Michigan lower courts.  In a 6-to-3 decision, the Court held that the roadblocks did not violate the Fourth Amendment.  Chief Justice William Rehnquist wrote the majority opinion and stated, “no one can seriously dispute the magnitude of the drunken driving problem or the States’ interest in eradicating it….The weight bearing on the other scale—the measure of the intrusion on motorists stopped briefly at sobriety checkpoints—is slight.”  Justice Rehnquist further justified his opinion by claiming that empirical evidence supported the effectiveness of sobriety checkpoints as a deterrent to drunk driving, thereby making the checkpoints necessary and effective.  Note that the majority decided that a deterrent effect is enough of a justification even if there is no evidence that the checkpoints are, in fact, effective.  Justice Rehnquist was joined by Justices Scalia, Kennedy, O’Connor, Blackmun and White.

In his dissenting opinion, Justice John Paul Stevens pointed out that a review by the Michigan trial court on sobriety checkpoints statistics, “based on an extensive record and affirmed by the Michigan Court of Appeals, indicate that the net effect of sobriety checkpoints on traffic safety is infinitesimal and possibly negative.”  In his dissenting opinion, Justice William Brennan, concluded “the findings of the trial court, based on an extensive record and affirmed by the Michigan Court of Appeals, indicate that the net effect of sobriety checkpoints on traffic safety is infinitesimal and possibly negative…That stopping every car might make it easier to prevent drunken driving is an insufficient justification for abandoning the requirement of individualized suspicion. The most disturbing aspect of the Court’s decision today is that it appears to give no weight to the citizen’s interest in freedom from suspicionless investigatory seizures.”

Twenty-one years later, DUI checkpoints have become a staple of local law enforcement efforts to curb drunk driving.  Despite scant evidence that DUI checkpoints work, M.A.D.D. continues to support these efforts arguing that the continued burden on civil rights is justified despite the dramatic and consistent decline of drunk driving and the successful stigmatization of the crime in society.  Perhaps they are misguided due to the copious amounts of money funneled to local law enforcement agencies.  States get grant money from the federal government to promote responsible driving. Whether the public is benefiting from the investment is debatable but the monetary benefit to law enforcement is not.  Additionally, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) guidelines say DUI checkpoints could be efficiently staffed with six officers, but often DUI checkpoints employ multiple jurisdictions and far more than six (6) officers.  It is estimated those additional officers at a DUI checkpoint cost state and federal taxpayers $5.5 million in 2008-2009.

Some argue that DUI checkpoints are just an annoyance. The police, however, have taken the idea of looking for signs of inebriation far further, using checkpoints to make far more arrests for seatbelt violations, warrant arrests, driving under suspension and other offenses besides drunk driving.  The officers take full advantage of  looking inside your car and according the U.S. Supreme Court in Illinois v. Caballes,  law enforcement has the right to use dog-sniffing drugs to look for drugs.  You are being subjected to a very intrusive search on no legal grounds whatsoever because there are no “articulable facts” as required by the Fourth Amendment.  We have also seen the expansion of checkpoints for purposes beyond drunk driving.  Some states use checkpoints to enforce immigration policy, seatbelt laws or simply to check your papers.  Checkpoints have become a slippery civil rights slope because stopping drunk drivers has become secondary to filling city coffers via ticket, towing, and car impound fees at the expense of guaranteed Constitutional protections. Just how far that slope erodes our civil rights remains to be seen.

Dayton DUI attorney Charles M. Rowland II has long been an opponent of the unjustified intrusion into your liberty caused by a reliance on OVI checkpoints.  If you find yourself in need of a passionate defender of your rights, contact Charles M. Rowland II at (937)318-1DUI [318-1384] or 1-888-ROWLAND [1-888-769-5263].  You can also follow him at www.facebook.com/daytondui or on Twitter @DaytonDUI.  ”All I do is DUI defense.”

Lima, Allen County Checkpoint Tonight (October 22, 2011)

October 22nd, 2011
Picture of the Kewpee Restaurant in downtown L...

The Ohio State Highway Patrol will be conducting an OVI sobriety checkpoint tonight (October 22, 2011) in Allen County along Rt. 81. The checkpoint will be from 9 p.m. to midnight.  Saturation patrols will be conducted in conjunction with the checkpoints.

If you are arrested for OVI in Lima or anywhere in Allen County, Ohio, your misdemeanor drunk driving case will be heard in the Lima Municipal Court. The Lima Municipal Court is located at 109 N. Union St. in downtown Lima, Ohio and maintains the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday [directions HERE].  The judges who will hear your case are the honorable William G. Lauber or the honorable Richard A. Workman.  To find out information about a specific case before the court you can access public information HERE.  You can reach the court at the following telephone numbers:

  • Civil Division:(419) 221-5275
  • Civil Division Fax:(419) 998-5517
  • Criminal/Traffic Divisions:(419) 221-5275
  • Criminal/Traffic Divisions Fax:(419) 998-5526
  • Probation Fax:(419) 998-5537 .
  • City Prosecutor (419) 221-5234
  • Public Defender (419) 221-5220

The Lima Municipal Court’s jurisdiction includes the cities of Lima and Delphos and the villages of BeaverdamBlufftonCairoElidaFort ShawneeHarrodLafayette, and Spencerville. You can access information about Allen County, Ohio via its web site HERE.  For news in and around Lima check out LimaOhio.com.

My connection to Lima and Allen County runs deep.  I attended Ohio Northern University and cut my teeth at the Lima City Prosecutor’s Mediation Services. I still get a thrill walking into the Lima Municipal Court as an experienced attorney. It’s like coming home.  If you have been accused of drunk driving in Lima, Ohio, please contact me for a free consultation right away.  Contact Charles Rowland by phone at 937-318-1DUI (937-318-1384), 937-879-9542, or toll-free at 1-888-ROWLAND (1-888-769-5263). For after-hours help contact our 24/7 DUI HOTLINE at 937-776-2671.  Immediate help is available by filling out the CONTACT form on any of these pages.  For information about Dayton DUI sent directly to your mobile device, text DaytonDUI (one word) to 50500.  Follow DaytonDUI on Twitter at www.Twitter.com/DaytonDUI or Get Twitterupdates via SMS by texting follow DaytonDUI to 40404. DaytonDUI is also available on Facebook and you can access updates by becoming a fan of Dayton DUI/OVI Defense.  You can also email Charles Rowland at: CharlesRowland@DaytonDUI.com or write to us at 2190 Gateway Dr., Fairborn, Ohio 45324.

Original story HERE.

Early Checkpoint in GermanTownship (Mongomery County)

September 2nd, 2011

There will be an OVI checkpoint operated along Rt. 4 in Germant Township from 5 p.m. until 9 p.m.  This is earlier than other checkpoints operated in this area.  You should expect saturation patrols to be present in the surrounding areas.

Contact Charles Rowland by phone at 937-318-1DUI (937-318-1384), 937-879-9542, or toll-free at 1-888-ROWLAND (1-888-769-5263).  For after-hours help contact our 24/7 DUI HOTLINE at 937-776-2671.  Visit www.DaytonDUI.com, www.SpringfieldDUI.com, www.OhioDUIdefense.com. Immediate help is available by filling out the CONTACT form on any of these pages.  For information about Dayton DUI sent directly to your mobile device, text DaytonDUI (one word) to 50500.  Follow DaytonDUI on Twitter at www.Twitter.com/DaytonDUI or Get Twitter updates via SMS by texting follow DaytonDUI to 40404. DaytonDUI is also available on Facebook and you can access updates by becoming a fan of Dayton DUI/OVI Defense.  You can also email Charles Rowland at: CharlesRowland@CharlesRowland.com or write to us at 2190 Gateway Dr., Fairborn, Ohio 45324.

Washington Court House (Fayette County) OVI Checkpoint Tonight, August 27, 2011

August 27th, 2011

Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over Is Coming To Washington Court House

There will be an OVI checkpoint in Washington Court House, from 10 p.m. Saturday until 3 a.m. Sunday. The checkpoint will be at the intersection of Columbus Avenue and Olive Street.  Police from all over Fayette County, the Ohio State Highway Patrol and officials from the Ohio Department of Transportation ODOT are manning the checkpoint.  You can also expect that additional officers will be on “saturation patrols” looking for impaired drivers.  As always, we encourage you not to drink and drive.  If you find yourself in need of help, please contact Ohio DUI attorney Charles M. Rowland II.  Contact Charles Rowland by phone at 937-318-1DUI (937-318-1384), 937-879-9542, or toll-free at 1-888-ROWLAND (1-888-769-5263).  For after-hours help contact our 24/7 DUI HOTLINE at 937-776-2671.

WASHINGTONCOURTHOUSEDUI.comwas developed to provide practical information regarding Washington Court House and Fayette County’s toughdrunk driving law. Here you will find information on DUI (now called OVI) law in the Washington Court House Municipal Court and the Fayette County Common Pleas Court. If you find yourself accused of a crime contact Charles M. Rowland II at 937-879-9542 or on the after hours DUI HOTLINE 937-776-2671. If you’ve been charged with DUI, it’s important that you consult an attorney immediately before you lose your rights!  Charles M. Rowland II has successfully represented the accused drunk driver for over ten years. As a former city prosecutor and a certified operator of the breath test machine, he has the credentials and the experience to help you get your life back! If you find yourself accused of a crime contact Charles M. Rowland II.

The Washington Court House County Municipal Court is located at 119 N. Main St., Washington Court House, Ohio 43160, and it can be reached at (740) 636-2350. The Court has the jurisdiction to hear misdemeanor criminal and traffic cases which involve offenses committed within Fayette County. The presiding Judge of the Washington Court House Municipal Court is the Honorable Victor D. Pontious, Jr. The Court is open from 8:00 A.M. until 4:00 P.M., Monday through Friday. Arraignments are held on Monday at 9:30 A.M. The Common Pleas Court is located on the 3rd Floor of the Fayette County Courthouse, 110 E. Court Street, Washington Court House, Ohio 43160, (740) 335-4750. The Common Pleas Judge is the Honorable Steven P. Beathard and the court is open Monday through Friday 7:30 a.m. through 4:00 p.m. The Fayette County Prosecutor is David B. Bender and his office is on the 1st Floor of the Courthouse, 110 E. Court St., Washington Court House, 43160, (740) 335-0888, email david.bender@fayette-co-oh.com. Information regarding inmates in the Fayette County Jail can be obtained at (740) 333-3783.

Visit www.DaytonDUI.comwww.SpringfieldDUI.com,www.OhioDUIdefense.comwww.KetteringDUI.com,www.BeavercreekDUI.comwww.FairbornDUI.com,  www.VandaliaDUI.com,www.HuberHeightsDUI.comwww.MiamisburgDUI.comwww.XeniaDUI.com orwww.CharlesRowland.com.  Immediate help is available by filling out the CONTACT form on any of these pages.  For information about Dayton DUI sent directly to your mobile device, text DaytonDUI (one word) to 50500.  Follow DaytonDUI on Twitter at www.Twitter.com/DaytonDUI or Get Twitterupdates via SMS by texting follow DaytonDUI to 40404. DaytonDUI is also available on Facebook and you can access updates by becoming a fan of Dayton DUI/OVI Defense.  You can also email Charles Rowland at: CharlesRowland@CharlesRowland.com or write to us at 2190 Gateway Dr., Fairborn, Ohio 45324.