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Crime & Safety

Solano County Probation to Keep Eye on Repeat DUI Offenders

Department given grant to step up enforcement.

 

Solano County Probation Press Release:

Felony and repeat misdemeanor DUI offenders are over represented in traffic crashes involving alcohol or other drugs, often with tragic results. The Solano County Probation Department will be making sure that these worst-of-the-worst offenders are complying with all court orders by means of a new traffic safety grant. The $120,000 grant was awarded by the California Office of Traffic Safety, through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

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Chief Probation Officer Christopher Hansen noted, “The California Office of Traffic Safety has provided Solano County the opportunity to hire a probation officer who will focus on these high-risk DUI offenders in the community. Balancing enforcement of court orders with treatment is an effective intervention for reducing repeat DUI offenses.”

The grant will fund officers to keep an eye on individuals who are on probation for felony DUI or multiple misdemeanor DUI convictions. Supervision for these high-risk offenders will include unannounced home searches, random alcohol and drug testing, and monitoring to ensure compliance with court-ordered DUI education and treatment programs.

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The Intensive Probation Supervision for High-Risk Felony and Repeat DUI Offenders grant is aimed at reducing the number of persons killed and injured in alcohol and other drug-related collisions in the county. Last year, 13 were killed and 259 injured in such crashes in Solano County.

The Solano County Probation Department will also collaborate with other local law enforcement agencies to conduct DUI/Driver license checkpoints and warrant service operations targeting individuals who fail to make court appearances after DUI arrests.

Drunk driving is one of America’s deadliest crimes. In 2010, nationally 10,225 people died in highway crashes involving a driver or motorcycle operator with a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of .08 or higher.  In California, the number killed was 791.

“California’s DUI death totals dropped significantly for five years,” said Christopher J. Murphy, Director of the Office of Traffic Safety. “But as the economy improves and people have more to celebrate, we don’t want those figures to go back up. An effective way to combat that is through ensuring these serious DUI offenders aren’t on a path back to drunk or drugged driving.”

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