SALT LAKE CITY — Utah has the lowest DUI-related fatality rate in the nation due largely to a Utah Highway Patrol…
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SALT LAKE CITY — Utah has the lowest DUI-related fatality rate in the nation due largely to a Utah Highway Patrol…
View full post on dui – Yahoo! News Search Results
Jury reaches verdict in Angels pitcher DUI death
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — A jury has reached a verdict in the murder case of a man accused of causing the crash that killed Los Angeles Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart and two others.
Read more on The Mercury
Stepbrother says he persuaded man accused in DUI death of Angels pitcher to keep drinking
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — The stepbrother of a man charged with murder in a drunken-driving crash that killed rookie Los Angeles Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart and two others testified that he pressured the defendant to keep drinking even though he wanted to go home.
Read more on CBS 6 Richmond
Nevada man gets 7-20 years for DUI in Utah runner’s death
LAS VEGAS — A 25-year-old Nevada man has been sentenced to seven to 20 years in state prison for driving under the…
Read more on Deseret News
Man sentenced after DUI death
A Huntington Beach man was sentenced today to more than a year in prison for killing his passenger after drinking and driving.
Read more on Huntington Beach Independent
Man sentenced after DUI death
A Huntington Beach man was sentenced today to more than a year in prison for killing his passenger after drinking and driving.
Read more on Huntington Beach Independent
A 25-year-old woman was sentenced to five years in Florida State Prison on Thursday morning after pleading guilty to DUI manslaughter in a 2007 crash that killed a good Samaritan.
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Lake Worth man pleads guilty to DUI manslaughter in death of mother of two
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Substance abuse prevention speakers take the topic seriously, but sometimes I wonder just how many others do? I suppose as a substance abuse prevention speaker who knows the pain and torment personally from an experiential level, I am more apt to see the danger in substance abuse and drunk driving.
I grew up the son of a mother (a former high school cheerleader and honor graduate) who was an alcoholic and substance abuser. As a child I saw my beloved mother self-destruct and torment my grandparents as a result of alcoholism and using every drug imaginable. Ironically, my mother (a former drunk driver herself) was killed when crossing the road as a pedestrian when an 18 year-old drunk driver hit her – killing her on impact.
Dead on arrival, police awaited the return of the young drunk driver who left the scene of the accident. Upon returning, the police video (which I later painfully watched) showed the young man crying and screaming, “I can’t live with this on my mind!”
As a former lifeguard and fitness trainer I don’t drink alcohol to this day. Yet I don’t condemn those who do and kindly serve as the designated driver whenever anybody close to me drinks.
After a childhood of pain and hell as a result of substance abuse and drunk driving, I myself was hit and nearly killed in July 2008 by a drunk driver (a two-time DUI offender driving after her license was revoked). The 61 year-old lady barreling down the road in a large Chevy truck, driving drunk at 4:40PM on a Tuesday afternoon, hit my car repeatedly (completely totaling it and nearly killing me) without stopping, attempting to flee the scene of the accident, after which she hit and totaled a parked car before being arrested by police.
For nearly five months I drove numerous rental cars, while battling my insurance company to be financially compensated to purchase a replacement vehicle for my automobile totaled by the negligible drunk driver. Even worse I spent days and nights in hospitals and doctors’ offices receiving medical treatment after the accident for injuries, which still cause me pain and trouble to this day. The added stress and strain medically and financially also negatively affected my marriage, as logistically my wife and I shared the one vehicle the drunk driver totaled.
Personally encountering the crooked and fraudulent business practices of tow truck companies, medical professionals, insurance claims adjusters, and car salesmen added additional aggravation and suffering to my life at a time when I was most vulnerable.
Nevertheless I somehow persevered and battled through it all to stand tall, becoming a voice of conscience to substance abusers, drunk drivers, they who prey on victims of catastrophic accidents, and those suffering through seasons of tragedy turning their world upside down.
I guess God spared my life so I can speak to others.
Paul F. Davis is a substance abuse victim and survivor. Paul inescapably speaks with passion, empathy, and heartfelt conviction to awake the conscience of the irresponsible and ill informed. Paul is a worldwide and frequently requested substance abuse prevention speaker, who has touched over 50 countries and 6 continents, bringing hope to the hurting, healing families, and transforming people of all ages to live responsibly.
Invite Paul to speak in your city!
407-967-7553