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| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Mar 2002 Location: Cocoa Florida
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For NRAJOE People Volunteer To Let Police Officers Get Them Drunk POSTED: 10:10 a.m. EDT April 16, 2003 SANTA FE, N.M. -- Officers served beers, screwdrivers, tequila shooters and vodka Jell-O shots to people -- then turned around and gave them sobriety tests for driving while intoxicated. Those liquored up by police had volunteered Monday to help 40-plus law enforcement cadets learn how to spot drunken drivers and get them off the roads. One volunteer drinker, Johnny Mares from Melrose, is a Curry County sheriff's deputy who gives field sobriety tests himself. "Would I take myself to jail?" Mares asked after stumbling through a few tests. "Yes. But it's important for these guys to go through the tests and find out for themselves." Before the field-sobriety tests, officials checked the volunteers -- who drank for more than three hours -- for blood-alcohol content. Their levels ranged from 0.07 to 0.18 percent. New Mexico's legal limit for DWI is 0.08. Some cadets' estimates of the volunteers' drunkenness showed the importance of the training. One cadet said he likely would have let a 21-year-old Santa Fe woman go after she apparently passed the field sobriety tests. The woman registered a 0.18 blood-alcohol level. Every certified law enforcement officer in the state -- from local police officers to Game and Fish wardens -- must complete the training. "We can teach them what to look for, and they can go through all the classes, but they all need to get some real experience of actually going through the tests with real people," said state Law Enforcement Academy agent and instructor Gabe Beardsley. Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed |
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