Pubdate: Wed, 23 Aug 2006 Source: Star-News (NC) Copyright: 2006 Wilmington Morning Star Contact: http://www.wilmingtonstar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/500 Author: Ken Little Map Editor Note: In paragraph 8: "The legislation also expands the definition of impaired driving to include the presence of any amount of illegal drugs in the blood." NEW LAW TOUGHTENS DWI PENALTIES Measure Provides More Enforcement Options Penalties for drunken driving got tougher under a multifaceted law signed Tuesday by Gov. Mike Easley. Known as The Motor Vehicle Driver Protection Act, the legislation increases penalties for DWI while ensuring laws are applied "fairly and consistently" throughout the state, Easley said in a prepared statement. The new law, which becomes effective Dec. 1, adds to the list of DWI-related crimes, including a new category of charges that apply when an impaired driver injures a victim. Drivers with previous impaired driving convictions within seven years of a crash may now be charged with "aggravated felony serious injury by vehicle" or "aggravated felony death by vehicle." Existing laws sometimes made it difficult to apply charges that specifically fit a driver's actions. In cases involving death, prosecutors have had to rely on a structure that obliged them to pursue convictions for crimes with widely divergent sentences, such as manslaughter as opposed to second-degree murder. "It gives the officer some more latitude in what they can charge and for my office in what we can prosecute," said Rex Gore, district attorney of Brunswick, Bladen and Columbus counties. "There were some inequities that would appear. Under the prior (guidelines), you could charge for death but not serious injury. Now we can address it under the DWI statute." The new law also limits the discretion of judges to find a DWI defendant not guilty if breathalyzer test results show a blood-alcohol concentration of 0.08 percent or more. A BAC of 0.08 percent is the state standard for drunken driving. "It made the language a little easier for the judges to rely strictly on the breathalyzer reading, regardless of how (defendants) did on the dexterity test," Gore said. The law requires prosecutors to document and report their reasons for dismissing DWI cases. The Administrative Office of the Courts can post the information on its Web site. The legislation also expands the definition of impaired driving to include the presence of any amount of illegal drugs in the blood. Gore said many of the measures signed into law by Easley were already practiced in the three-county 13th Prosecutorial District he supervises. Statistics compiled by the state Highway Patrol rank New Hanover County at eight on the statewide list for alcohol-related highway crashes. Brunswick County ranks 10th, and Pender County 21st. The legislation is welcome news to Wilmington-based Highway Patrol 1st Sgt. J.O. Holmes. "There's several parts in that bill that give us more tools. It gives law enforcement more to work with," Holmes said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman