DWI checkpoints set for safe prom and graduation season

 

Police will be setting up sobriety checkpoints around Middlesex County as part of a program to ensure the safety of high school students during their prom and graduation ceremonies, according to an April 22, 2017 statement from Middlesex County Prosecutor Andrew C. Carey.

The municipal police departments in the county and the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Crash Investigations Unit are implementing the program.

The sobriety checkpoints will be set up randomly through the end of June to apprehend impaired drivers.

While there have been numerous arrests for impaired driving over the years, no students have been killed or injured in crashes or arrested on charges of driving while intoxicated during the prom and graduation season.

First-time offenders run the risk of losing their driving privileges for at least seven months and face a variety of fines, insurance surcharges and legal fees that could total as much as $15,000.

The purpose of the checkpoints is to remove intoxicated drivers from the street; to educate the public about the dangers of drinking and driving and drugged driving, and to deter people from getting behind the wheel after using alcohol or drugs.

The overall goal is to promote the safety of the motoring public and to ensure that prom and graduation celebrants arrive home safely.

 

 

Comments are closed.