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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
4 pages in length. From where Jason J. Legg sits, the goal of any DUI task force is simple: "protect the public from drunk drivers and protect drunk drivers from themselves" (Legg, 2007), but then the District Attorney of Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania has experienced more consequences of drunken drivers than the vast majority of people and can make such a condensed answer. Woven into that statement is the objective for people to learn to take responsibility for their actions and not assume they are the only ones on the road who can safely operate a motor vehicle even when they are under the legal limit. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCduitaskforce.rtf
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of Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania has experienced more consequences of drunken drivers than the vast majority of people and can make such a condensed answer. Woven into that statement is
the objective for people to learn to take responsibility for their actions and not assume they are the only ones on the road who can safely operate a motor vehicle
even when they are under the legal limit. Contrary to popular belief, the idea isnt necessarily to make arrests. The checkpoints plant a seed of precaution, if not
make the hairs stand up on the back of the neck of a driver who is willing to chance a drink or two (Gigler, 2005). One of the most
important tools law enforcement officials use to reach their goals is education; enlightening the general public about alcohol thresholds for judgment and response time is a big gun in the
arsenal of a DUI task force. Despite what many believe, alcohol is not an upper but rather a depressant that slows down the bodys reaction. It is a
drug that alters physical mobility and the minds capacity to make quick decisions. Slow reaction time is perhaps the single most critical factor in alcohol-related accidents, inasmuch as the
very nature of intoxicating beverages is to take effect quickly and wear off slowly (Legg, 2007). While increased consumption on a regular basis may build up tolerance, thus reducing
some of the effects alcohol has on bodily functions, the need for more drinks in order to achieve the same level of intoxication may encourage a person to increase his
or her intake just to maintain a buzz. Legg (2007) points to studies that show driving impairment can occur with a blood alcohol
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