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Tag: state patrol

  • WA Traffic Safety Commission considering re-establishing DUI checkpoints, lowering BAC

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    Newly released body camera video shows the moment of impact when a person suspected of driving under the influence of drugs drove the wrong way on 2nd Avenue, slamming head-on into a Puyallup Police Officer.

    “I’m trapped, car’s on fire,” the officer says to his radio after the airbag deploys.

    The driver was spotted by an officer already arresting someone suspected of DUI just as the Washington State Fair ended Friday evening, according to Puyallup police.

    Those were the first of 30 suspected DUI drivers over the Labor Day weekend.

    “It’s tragic that our officer got hit. Thank God he’s okay, but I think about if our officer didn’t get in the way and stop that vehicle, that could have been a citizen or a family just driving home,” said Captain Jeremy Hendrick, with Puyallup police.

    In King County, Washington State Patrol arrested 25 DUI suspects, King County Sheriff’s Office caught 13 more, and other municipalities had their own DUI arrests.

    “Any DUI arrest, any DUI collisions are 100% preventable,” Trooper Rick Johnson with the State Patrol said. “Especially these days…there are so many ways to get from Point A to Point B if you choose to consume something that will impair you.”

    Washington State Patrol and Puyallup police were some of several law enforcement agencies to bring extra personnel and cruisers for DUI enforcement over the long holiday weekend.

    WSP troopers take arrest and crash data to decide where to target enforcement.

    “It’s geomapping areas to emphasize those areas which historically have been a problem in order to prevent anything bad from happening and removing bad drivers,” Johnson said.

    The Washington Traffic Safety Commission (WTSC) reported more crashes taking place since the pandemic. In 2019, 267 people were killed in DUI crashes compared to 344 people who were killed in those kinds of crashes in 2024.

    The WTSC reported half of all fatal crashes involve a person suspected of driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

    “Impaired driving is the number one risk factor we see in fatal crashes,” Mark McKechnie, the external relations director for WTSC.

    In response to rising crashes, the Washington state lawmakers requested the WTSC to find ways to curb DUIs in the state. The Commission proposes:

    • Re-establishing DUI checkpoints

    • Lower the blood-alcohol limit from 0.08 to 0.05

    • Use road-side body fluid tests to test for drugs that aren’t alcohol

    • Crack down on people not using interlock devices who should be

    After the Washington Supreme Court rulings, DUI checkpoints were deemed illegal in the state.

    The WTSC estimates, based on data from other states and countries that have them, 12 deaths and 418 injuries by impaired drivers were prevented by DUI checkpoints. p The $6 million investment would prevent more than $30 million in damages for victims, the study estimates.

    “The impact is a combination of prevention and intervention because part of what you do when you run a checkpoint is you publicize them. You want people to know that there’s a checkpoint so, it provides a deterrence to prevent people from driving impaired in the first place.” McKechnie said.

    McKechnie points to the report showing that lowering the blood alcohol limit would have double the preventable effect on lives lost and injuries caused by impaired drivers. He points to several other countries and states that have lower BAC limits than Washington.

    “By leaving our ‘limit’ per se at 0.08 percent, it unfortunately seems to be sending the public the wrong message that they’re okay to drive until they’re at 0.08 percent or above and that’s simply not true,” McKechnie said.

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  • 10-day waiting period to purchase a firearm starts Monday

    10-day waiting period to purchase a firearm starts Monday

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    OLYMPIA, Wash.In just two days, purchasing a firearm in Washington will look different.

    New gun laws take effect on Jan. 1, which means anyone looking to purchase a gun will have additional steps to take before getting one in their hands.

    Throughout 2023, there was pushback on both sides of the argument across Washington state. Now, businesses are preparing for the changes.

    When House Bill 1143 was first brought to the table earlier this year, it was authored by 18 state leaders. They said, at the time, it was an effort to reduce gun violence in the state.

    Fast forward to the end of 2023: those laws will be in effect in the new year.

    “We’re hoping that the state patrol is prepared and on day one when we roll this thing out, that the background checks will get processed, and the logins will work and all this stuff is going to roll like it’s supposed to,” said Wade Gaughran, the owner of Wade’s Eastside Guns.

    Gaughran said his business is ready to go. However, he has reservations about the state’s preparations.

    “I have like zero confidence that that is going to happen because it’s something new,” Gaughran said. “And so, we’ll see. We’ll see what happens. The system that’s in place was working extremely well.”

    The major changes come Jan. 1, which now says there’s a 10-day waiting period to purchase any gun, whether that’s a shotgun or pistol.

    “It processes as it’s supposed to, and ten days is actually ten days,” Gaughran said. “Ten government days is never ten government days.”

    Gaughran said it’ll be on the businesses to play middleman with customers and the new laws.

    “We’re the buffer there, right,” Gaughran said. “Nobody gets to talk to the state patrol. Nobody’s calling state patrol and asking, where is my background check? They’re calling us – where is my background check? I want to pick up my gun, the law says ten days.”

    All in all, after three decades of selling firearms, Gaughran said this is just another change in the way the evolution of the gun-selling landscape that they’ll work through.

    “It’s just another business problem,” Gaughran said. “I mean, if I wanted a simple life, I wouldn’t have sold guns. This is just a tough business. It’s always a tough business.”

    House Bill 1143 was led in part by State Representative Liz Berry and Senator Strom Peterson. Earlier this month, Rep. Berry and other state leaders were at the White House for the Legislative Convening on Gun Violence Prevention. Rep. Berry said on her social media, gun violence is one of her main focus points as it’s personal to her.

    FOX13 has reached out to more of the state leaders spearheading this bill and will update this story when we receive a response.

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