I want to raise public awareness about the peril faced by college students because of drunk driving.
On Oct. 7, 2000, a drunk 48-year-old Honolulu cop sped through a red light and killed college student Dana Ambrose, 19. Naturally, she got added to the statistics that fuel political debate, guide the legislative process and promote prejudice against teenagers: the official tally of “teenagers killed in drunk driving crashes.”
Similarly, on June 19, 2004, a drunk 56-year-old Detroit police lieutenant drove the wrong way down a one-way street, killing college student Nehemiah Thompson, 20, in a head-on crash.
Well, that’s one example of how we can prevent underage drinking. Of course, it’s not fair to stereotype all cops by a few bad examples; obviously not all cops drive drunk.
On September 22, 2006, New York City police officer Marlene Rivera, 24, was drunk, according to her autopsy, but she knew better than to drive. Instead, she caught a ride with another drunk cop. Additionally, as Bridgeton, Mo. police officer Scott Armstrong, 31, drove his patrol car on January 12, 2005, he was sober, according to the autopsy that was performed after a drunk cop crashed into him.
Back to the peril faced by college students. On March 2, 2006, a 47-year-old motorist with 11 prior drunk driving convictions drove a pickup truck in Burton, Ohio. He was driving drunk (with a 0.26% blood alcohol content), leading police on a high-speed chase, driving under suspension and driving left of center. But at least he wasn’t drinking underage, right? He crashed head-on into a car with three Hiram College students, killing Grace Chamberlain and Andrew Hopkins, both 18, and critically injuring Evan Dasilva, 19. But at least he wasn’t buying beer for them.
What should be done to reduce the danger to college students? Conduct more sting operations at liquor stores? Make IDs tougher to counterfeit? Impose harsher penalties on people under 21 caught drinking irresponsibly?
Folks should send their best ideas to the drunk drivers in the New York Legislature, who decide what laws to pass. You can also vote, but you’re vastly outnumbered at the polls by drunk drivers who don’t care about the carnage any more than they care about your rights.
Tom Alciere is the Webmaster of Underage Drinkers Against Drunk Driving.