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Orange County DUI Checkpoints: Memorial Day report

Orange County DUI Checkpoints: Memorial Day report

Laguna Beach Police did well this past Memorial Day weekend, with an Orange County DUI Checkpoint from Sunday night to early Monday.

Police in Laguna Beach reported that they had arrested six suspected drunken drivers and cited 11 drivers for operating a vehicle on a revoked or suspended license out of 1,625 drivers that passed through their DUI checkpoint set up from 9 p.m. Sunday to 3 a.m. Monday near Wesley Drive on Pacific Coast Highway.

A Laguna Beach Police spokesperson said, ““Per capita, we make more DUI arrests than any other agency in the state,” which is likely not true. In related news, the Orange County Sheriff’s Department has a DUI sting for those driving on suspended license, at the Harbor Justice Center, in Newport Beach. Of the fifteen offenders with suspended licenses that were targeted, eight were stopped for driving on a suspended license. So Orange County DUI Checkpoints: Memorial Day report shows eight driving on a suspended license cases, and six DUI cases from the one checkpoint.

Laguna Beach, California was the site of a Orange County DUI Checkpoint Memorial Day weekend.

WHY DOES LAW ENFORCEMENT HAVE ORANGE COUNTY DUI CHECKPOINTS?

DUI Checkpoints are even admitted by law enforcement to be less effective than other means of removing drunk drivers from the road. But, even though DUI checkpoints don’t work, police state they had a deterrent effect preventing people from driving in the first place.  The truth is that funding in grants from the California Office of Traffic Safety (OTS), MADD, and the Federal Government ensure DUI checkpoints are used first before other measures.

ARE DUI CHECKPOINTS LEGAL?

The US Supreme Court, as well as the law in California, makes DUI checkpoints legal, as long as they follow certain criteria, including:

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