Any first alcohol-impaired driving event is a significant and substantial predictor of future recidivism.

Author(s)
Ahlin, E.M. Baum, H.M. Duncan, D. Raleigh, R. Joyce, J. Gretsinger, N. Rauch, W.J. & Zador, P.L.
Year
Abstract

It is a widely held belief among the legislative and judicial branches of state government in the United States that first offenders criminally convicted of violating an alcohol-related traffic law are drivers with a single and isolated alcohol-related event. This finding is inconsistent with published estimates that a person can drive while impaired by alcohol 200 to 2,000 times before being arrested once (1-6). Moreover, some drivers manage to have their records expunged under certain conditions and many state motor vehicle administration (MVA) offices routinely purge driving records after a set number of years. Therefore, it is reasonable to assume that the typical so-called first offender will have had an extensive history of alcohol-impaired driving by the time he or she makes it into the MVA's record system. The low probability of arrest (much less conviction) for alcohol-impaired driving, the practice of expunging and/or purging driver records, and the leniency with which state legislative and judicial systems handle so-called first offenders warrants a closer look at administrative, criminal, and diversion sanctions and the impact of "disposition sequence" on the deterrence of alcohol-impaired driving. (Author/publisher) For the covering abstract of the conference see ITRD Abstract No. E201067.

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Publication

Library number
C 27915 (In: C 27890) /83 / ITRD E201092 (also at CD-ROM C 27890/C27945/C28028)
Source

In: Alcohol, drugs and traffic safety : proceedings of the 16th ICADTS International Conference on Alcohol, Drugs and Traffic Safety T'2002, Montreal, Canada, August 4-9, 2002, Volume 1, p. 161-167, 12 ref.

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