Police to focus on drunk drivers
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Deepa Bharath
Police will step up their efforts to reduce traffic accidents
involving drunk drivers in the city, a popular destination for dining
and entertainment.
The Costa Mesa Police Department will focus on DUI enforcement
during the “You Drink and Drive, You Lose” national campaign today
through July 10, Costa Mesa Police Officer Bryan Wadkins said.
The city has seen a “serious increase” in DUI collisions in 2004,
he said. As of May 31, there have been 62 accidents caused by drunk
drivers in Costa Mesa, Wadkins said.
“That’s an 11% increase compared to the same time last year,” he
said. “We also had three DUI fatalities in our city. We had only one
last year.”
The city has seen more than its share of drunk drivers this year,
Wadkins said.
The first alcohol-related fatality this year happened on March 5,
when Pawel Stanislaw Wiater of Costa Mesa struck two pedestrians who
were crossing 17th Street after leaving Pierce Street Annex. Andre
Felipe de Oliveira Braga, 31, died on the scene while another
25-year-old man suffered serious injuries.
On May 18, two college-age, Newport-Mesa men died in a car crash
on Placentia Avenue after the driver lost control, drove onto the
sidewalk, hit a tree, then ran head-on into a light pole, causing the
car to flip and land on its roof.
More recently, two Costa Mesa traffic officers were involved in a
motorcycle crash on Memorial Day on the San Diego Freeway. One of the
officers was injured, while the other rescued not only his partner
but the allegedly drunk motorcyclist who caused the crash.
Cosa Mesa police will conduct two sobriety checkpoints as part of
their special enforcement, one today and another on July 1 -- both
near 17th Street and Westminster Avenue, where one of the fatalities
occurred, Wadkins said.
“It has been one of our problem areas, and we want to send a clear
message to the people in that neighborhood,” he said.
The various incidents this year have given officers a new sense of
purpose, Wadkins said.
“We’re going out there with renewed energy and inspiration to do
our job and make the streets safer,” he said.
Costa Mesa police officers make a record number of DUI arrests in
their city compared to others in the county, but these incidents are
on the rise, Wadkins said.
“Many of the younger drivers are more afraid of being arrested
than being injured,” he said. “They don’t think they are vulnerable
to injury. They think it can’t happen to them.”
The number of DUI crashes has been rising nationally for the last
three years, said Reidel Post, executive director of the Orange
County chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving.
“Sadly, we believe the reason for that is complacency on the part
of the public,” she said.
One way to counter the problem is to support law enforcement
officials and encourage their work, Post said. Volunteers from the
group will be at both of Costa Mesa’s sobriety checkpoints to
distribute informative brochures to the public and to provide moral
support to the officers, she said.
“There’s also another reason we’re there,” Post added. “And that
is to say ‘thank you’ to the officers for working these checkpoints.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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