Pubdate: Mon, 22 Feb 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: PAUL ZIELBAUER New York Times DRUNKEN DRIVERS' CARS TO BE SEIZED AT ARRESTS NEW YORK -- In what city officials described as the toughest municipal policy against drunken driving in the nation, the New York City Police Department will begin seizing cars from people arrested on charges of drunken driving, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani announced Saturday. The plan, which is to take effect at 12:01 a.m. Monday, will allow a police officer to seize a suspect's car where it is stopped, regardless of the driver's circumstances. ``This will be a very, very useful way to reduce even more the number of traffic fatalities in the city,'' Giuliani said at a news conference at police headquarters in lower Manhattan. City officials first floated the seizure plan about a month ago. Since then, Giuliani said, he had Michael Hess, the city's corporation counsel, study the legal ramifications to make sure that the plan would survive what the mayor said were almost inevitable court challenges from civil liberties groups. Legal experts said the initiative raised constitutional issues but could act as a deterrent. Draconian but effective? ``If you can put the driver in jail for being drunk while driving, it seems to me there's no greater deprivation in taking the instrumentality of that crime from him,'' said Richard Uviller, a professor of criminal law at Columbia University Law School. ``It's a Draconian measure, there's no question about it. But if people know they could lose their cars if they drink too much, they may not drive them, and that could be very effective.'' Laws in 22 states, including California, authorize municipal officials to confiscate the cars of drunken drivers, but virtually all those laws involve repeat offenders, officials with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration have said. New York law allows the seizure of vehicles owned by drivers who repeatedly drive while intoxicated, but that law has rarely been enforced. In taking the initiative, New York City is expanding a city forfeiture law that municipalities use to cut down on drug trafficking and prostitution. Court challenges The leaders of civil liberties groups bristled Saturday at Giuliani's plan and promised to seek constitutional challenges to it in court. Last year, the New York City police made 6,368 arrests for driving while intoxicated, in which a driver's blood alcohol level is 0.10 percent or higher. (The level is 0.08 percent in California.) In New York, drivers can also be stopped for driving while impaired, in which the threshold for blood alcohol is 0.06 percent to 0.09 percent. But the new seizure policy will only affect driving while intoxicated, said Police Commissioner Howard Safir. The mayor's plan was enthusiastically endorsed by a representative of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, a national organization that has long advocated harsher penalties for drunken drivers. ``Drunk driving is a violent crime, and the weapon of choice is a vehicle. Does MADD have any sympathy for the drunk drivers who may lose their expensive cars? Absolutely not,'' said Maureen Fisher-Riccardella, president of the New York state chapter of the organization, who stood beside Giuliani during the news conference. - --- MAP posted-by: Pat Dolan