Police take DUI action
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Marisa O’Neil
A swarm of patrol cars hit the streets late Friday night, trolling
for any clue -- a little weave, darkened headlights, a slight
hesitation, excessive speed.
Their quarry? Drunken drivers.
Costa Mesa police hold sobriety checkpoints throughout the city
about six times a year. But Friday night’s so-called saturation
patrol, which fielded nine two-officer patrol units with the sole
intent of tracking down impaired drivers, was the first such patrol
operation the department has conducted in nearly two years, Sgt. Rich
Allum said.
“When someone looks out the window of a bar tonight, I want them
to see red and blue lights,” Allum told officers during a briefing
before they hit the streets.
Costa Mesa police have a reputation for catching drunken drivers.
Officers routinely win Century Awards from Mothers Against Drunk
Driving, presented for making more than 100 DUI arrests in a year.
This year, Officer Tony Yannizzi earned his fifth one.
Yannizzi and Allum -- who teamed up on Friday -- have made
thousands of DUI arrests. Part of their success is their training and
knowing how to spot impaired drivers.
But the sheer numbers of them passing through the city mean many
impaired drivers come to the officers, Allum pointed out.
“There’s just so darn many of them,” he said.
Last year, half of Costa Mesa’s 10 fatal traffic crashes were
alcohol-related, Allum said.
Sobriety checkpoints are one, high-profile way of bringing
attention to the problem. Though Costa Mesa police usually arrest
about 10 impaired drivers during a checkpoint, the operation’s main
purpose is education, Allum said.
Friday’s beefed-up patrols were funded by grants the department
received from the state Office of Traffic Safety in a program called
Remove Aggressive and Impaired Drivers. It added eight police cars
and a helicopter patrol to the regular DUI roving patrols the
department fields four days a week.
“These are more effective than checkpoints, but they don’t educate
as many people -- just the person getting arrested,” Allum said. “But
it serves a purpose. It takes an impaired driver off the road.”
The patrol cars headed out just before 9 p.m. Friday.
Erratic driving can give officers cause to pull over a driver. So
can a broken tail light or darkened headlights after nightfall.
During their first half hour on the street, Allum and Yannizzi
made a rapid succession of four car stops for minor vehicle code
violations. None of those drivers was impaired, and all were let off
with a warning.
“It would be nice if we didn’t find any [drunken drivers] and
nobody died tonight,” Allum said.
Then, just 45 minutes into the operation, another team made its
first arrest. According to police, that driver had a blood alcohol
content of .21% -- close to three times the legal limit of .08%.
“You know what? We educated him,” Allum said.
From then on, the hits kept coming.
One team arrested a man driving his Mercedes on Baker Street with
close to twice the legal limit in his blood stream, according to a
preliminary test. He also admitted to taking Vicodin, which
intensifies the effects of alcohol, Officer Michael Yamada said.
Another team pulled over a driver on Newport Boulevard and gave
him a field sobriety test. As they did so, a man came out of a nearby
doughnut shop to watch and talk with Allum.
The man told Allum that Costa Mesa police had arrested him on
suspicion of DUI 10 years ago. After that, he went into rehab and has
been clean ever since, he said.
“And he’s going to go in there and tell them about what happened
to him,” Allum said as the man made his way back to other customers
in the shop.
Early Saturday morning, one of their last arrests on suspicion of
DUI was a high school student who just turned 18. She’s due to graduate next week.
“This’ll stay in the system with her for 10 years,” Officer Jose
Torres said of the arrest.
By the end of the night, police pulled over nearly 100 drivers and
arrested seven people on suspicion of drunken driving. That’s nearly
the number of arrests they make at a checkpoint, which requires about
twice the officers.
They impounded another four cars, driven by people whose licenses
were suspended or who were driving without insurance.
“You just hope somebody gets the point,” Allum said.
At least one person did.
As police made an arrest in a residential neighborhood, two men
stood in a nearby driveway. They watched while the driver blew for an
alcohol test.
One of the men shook his head.
“I walk,” he told his friend. “I walk. I won’t drive.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at marisa.oneil @latimes.com.
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