Public Intoxication: Shaming Drunk Drivers
February 19, 2008 by Kathy McManus
If you want to send a message, the old saying goes, use Western Union.
In Arizona, authorities who want to send a message to drunk drivers are using public humiliation, by posting the drivers’ photos on a website and on huge highway billboards with this scarlet letter taunt: Drive Drunk…See Your Mug Shot Here.
Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas is the driving force behind the shaming project. Its sobering website stopduiaz.com, includes the names, mug shots, and blood alcohol levels of offenders, as well as stories about the victims they killed or harmed.
Does the tactic hold drunk drivers responsible for their actions, or hold them up to public ridicule?
"There are potential offenders who can be deterred by simple embarrassment or shaming," Thomas told the Arizona Republic newspaper. Tackling drunk driving, he said, requires “new and effective ways.”
There’s no argument that drunk driving should not be tolerated. An average of 11 people die each week in Arizona in alcohol-related traffic accidents.
But critics question the practice of shaming people who have been punished by the judicial system. A spokeswoman for Mothers Against Drunk Driving (M.A.D.D.) praised the website for giving voice to victims, but objected to the aspect of public ridicule, saying “M.A.D.D. would not want to be involved in calling out offenders. We are interested in research and science-based activities proven to stop drunk driving.”
Tell us what you think—will public shaming teach other drivers to be more responsible? Should authorities attempt to shame thieves, drug dealers, crooked politicians and others into law-abiding, responsible citizens as well?
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12 Comments
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February 19, 2008 by Dorothy Gardiner
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March 8, 2008 by Sandy
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March 22, 2008 by terrance tattrie
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March 22, 2008 by S. Wade
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April 1, 2008 by Mary Duval
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April 11, 2008 by Kristie Votaw
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January 22, 2010 by Earl Shoop
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May 14, 2010 by medical assistant
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June 8, 2010 by Pasquale Bottiglieri
I have been fortunate enough to have had years of experience that have given me front line experience with this question, that is, public humiliation of persons who are or have been guilty of driving while impaired by alcohol.
As an EMT I First Responder, I saw more vehicle accidents involving "drunk driving" than I care to remember, but one in particular stands out in my mind. As we assisted in the hopeless task of assisting an MD in providing medical attention to a young lady who had experienced fatal injuries, the driver, her boy friend, still drunk but finally aware of what had happened, came crashing through the door of the ER with two Policemen attempting to hold him back. She had already passed on due to multiple severe injuries incurred by going head first through the windshield (no seat belt) and experiencing the full impact of a 60+ mph collision with a brick wall.
As a Vocational Instructor at a County Jail, I by chance happened to be standing in the intake area and overheard a conversation between a Police Officer and a man who was lying on a bed in one of the holding cells. The man was waking up from a drunk and was yelling at the Officer. The Officer advised him that he needed to be aware that he had had an accident, that it was a serious accident, that, in fact, he had caused the death of three people, a woman and her young son and an elderly woman who was in the back seat. After a short period of screaming, there was dead silence in the room and the Officer closed and latched the door. She, the Officer, stood for a moment, sobbed briefly, then stepped over to the desk to file the necessary paperwork.
As an Addictions Counselor, I dealt with a young man who, after multiple alcohol related driving offenses, was finally given the choice by a judge the quit drinking entirely or do some state time. After attending the 28 day program in which I was employed, he committed another similar offense and was sentenced to three years in a State Penitentiary.
People who drive under the influence of alcohol or any chemical that impairs their ability to do it safely are a serious threat to their own well being and to the well being of every other driver or pedestrian they come in contact with. Those people need to be taken off the road by any means necessary including, where it is administered after exhausting every other means, public embarrassment and/or imprisonment.
I want to close with yet another comment that the best time to start the process of keeping impaired drivers off the road is as early as possible in the educational system. Teachers need to be able to step out from under the standards long enough to discuss this subject along with several others especially with those students who are growing up in households in which alcohol use is taken for granted, and the parents of those students need to be directly involved in those discussions.
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December 13, 2010 by erarneLelitty
Do i have to get an auto insurance when i buy a used car? or else, they don't sell the car to a person who doesn't have an auto insurance? I currently have a lease car that will be returned this January next year. But i want to get a used car soon so that i can work on the car, but i won't be driving it around. The car will be in my garage until i return the lease car and get an auto insurance. I live in Philadelphia, PA Any suggestion?
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