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The Smoking Gun: Dick Cheney's Youthful Indiscretions OCTOBER 28--Vice President Dick Cheney's closest aide, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby , was fingered today in the "Plamegate" leak investigation. While Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald has said that his probe might not be complete, TSG has no idea if Cheney himself ran afoul of the law in connection with the disclosure of a CIA officer's identity. But we do know that the veep has previously been busted. Twice. Back when he had hair and liked to get loaded and drive. Here's a reprise of a story chronicling Cheney's DWI history. When news of George W. Bush's drunken driving arrestsurfaced during the final week of the 2000presidential campaign, Republicans tried to dismiss itas one of those "youthful indiscretions" Bush hadsteadfastly refused to discuss. Of course, when he gotpopped in Kennebunkport in 1976, Bush was 30 yearsold, hardly a kid. Vice President Dick Cheney, on the other hand, couldactually argue that his two DWIs came when he wasyoung and reckless. Court and police records obtained by The Smoking Gunshow that Cheney was convicted of drunk driving twiceduring an eight-month period in the early 1960s in hishome state of Wyoming. The two convictions came whenCheney was 21 and 22 and resulted in fines and a briefsuspension of his driver's license. On November 2, in the wake of the Bush DWI discovery,a Cheney spokesperson told reporters that the vicepresidential candidate also had a rap sheet. But theBush-Cheney campaign refused to provide any furtherdetails about the DWI busts. So TSG will now handlethat chore. Cheney first privately disclosed the arrests in 1989,after he had been nominated for Secretary of Defense.According to an account in Bob Woodward's "TheCommanders," Cheney told members of the Senate ArmedServices committee about the DWI arrests during aclosed confirmation hearing. Cheney told the senatorsthat he believed it would be best to publicly disclosethe busts. But Armed Services committee members saidthere was no need for the disclosure and subsequentlyconfirmed Cheney in a 20-0 vote. Following the May 1991 publication of Woodward's book,there was no mention of Cheney's arrests until thebrief confirmation offered by the candidate'sspokesperson last November. But the vice presidenthimself mentioned his rap sheet in an interview in thecurrent issue (dated May 7) of The New Yorker. Cheneynoted that after dropping out of Yale in early 1961,he found himself "working, building power lines,having been in a couple of scrapes with the law." Thebusts, he said, made him "think about where I was andwhere I was headed. I was headed downa bad road, if I continued on that course." Cheney's first DWI conviction came in November 1962when he was 21. According to this docket fromCheyenne's Municipal Court , Cheney was nailed fordrunkenness and "operating motor vehicle whileintoxicated." A Cheyenne Police Judge found Cheneyguilty of the two charges and hit him with a 30-daysuspension of his driver's license. Cheney also had toforfeit a $150 bond posted at the time of his arrest.Further information about the case--such as thedefendant's blood alcohol content or whether Cheneywas jailed following the bust--is unavailable sinceother court records from that period have beendestroyed, according to Wyoming officials. Details of Cheney's second Wyoming arrest, in July1963, have also fallen victim to time and recordsdestruction practices at the local Municipal Court.But a police arrest card (similar to the one thathaunted Dubya) maintained by the Rock Springs PoliceDepartment shows that Cheney was fined $100 for hissecond DWI conviction. The card lists the chargeagainst Cheney, who was then working as a groundmanlaying power lines, as "11-44," the criminal codeclassification for drunken driving, according toPolice Chief Neil Kourbelas. At the time of the RockSprings arrest, Kourbelas said that local cops andjudges would not have known that young Cheney was aboozing 'n driving recidivist. The police department,Kourbelas said, "wouldn't have had the ability toautomatically check with other jurisdictions to findout if anyone had had prior arrests or convictions. Wecould have arrested Jack the Ripper back then and hadno idea what he had done." Since that second Wyoming arrest, Cheney has kept hisnose clean. Join TSG's mailing list . Enter contest , perhaps win loot. home | contest | archive | email
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blood alcohol content) to Insure.com Car Insurance - Official site. Compare auto insurance quotes, 200 companies, instant term life insurance quotes, life insurance quotes, health insurance quotes, medical insurance quotes, dental insurance, long-term care insurance, renter's insurance. Choose one Auto Term Life Health Homeowners Dental Quick Issue Life Children's Life --- Travel Motorcycle Boat/Watercraft Classic Auto Classic Boat --- -- British Visitors: Click Here Canadian Visitors: Click Here How many drinks does it take? Calculate your blood-alcohol level By Insure.com Blood-Alcohol Content Calculator A person's blood-alcohol level is the result of a complex interaction of weight, gender, alcohol consumed, and time. Weight (pounds) 100 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 190 200 210 220 230 240 250 260 270 280 290 300 Drinks Consumed (12 ounces beer or equivalent) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Over Time Period (hours) 1 2 3 4 5 6 Gender Female Male B.A.C.: The basic formula for estimating a person's blood-alcohol concentration comes from The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Each drink in this calculation assumes a volume of .54 ounces of alcohol (one shot of distilled spirits, a glass of wine, or 12 ounces of beer). The basic formula for estimating a person's blood-alcohol concentration comes from The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Each drink in this calculation assumes a volume of .54 ounces of alcohol (one shot of distilled spirits, a glass of wine, or 12 ounces of beer). Many of us have wondered just how many drinks it takes before we'd be considered legally drunk. Alcohol is a major factor in traffic accidents. There is an alcohol-related traffic fatality every 30 minutes, and an alcohol-related traffic injury every 2 minutes. Alcohol-related crashes are defined as those where someone involved, either a driver or a pedestrian or another non-occupant, had a traceable amount of alcohol in his or her blood. According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, 17,401 people died in alcohol-related crashes in 2003 and alcohol was involved in 40 percent of all crash fatalities. About 1.5 million drivers were arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol or narcotics in 2002 (latest data available). This is roughly the same amount as were arrested in 1999. The arrest rate works out to one arrest for every 137 licensed drivers in the United States. About 30 percent of all Americans will be involved in an alcohol-related crash at some point in their lives. In addition, 68% of children killed in alcohol-related crashes ride in a car with a drinking driver. As of July, 2004, every state and the District of Columbia had lowered the limit defining drunk driving from 0.10 BAC (blood alcohol content) to 0.08. Delaware and Minnesota were the last two states that made 0.08 BAC the level defining drunk driving. In the past year, several states have changed the definition to 0.08 in response to the threat of federal highway funding cuts. Louisiana's law lowering the limit defining drunk driving, effective August, 2004, also bars a driver in a crash from recovering damages if the driver's BAC exceeds 0.08 and if found more than 25 percent at fault as a result of the higher BAC. In February 2004 a lawsuit was filed in Los Angeles accusing Anheuser-Busch and the Miller Brewery Company of deliberately marketing their products to young people. The suit was brought by the parents of a young woman killed by an underage drunk driver in 2003. Since November 2003, similar lawsuits have been filed in three other states and the District of Columbia. A year-end 2003 public opinion poll conducted by Data Development Corporation for Anheuser-Busch found that 84 percent of Americans favor stricter enforcement of zero-tolerance laws for underage drivers and 93 percent for repeat offender laws. Over half of drivers arrested for drunk driving in the nation are repeat offenders, according to a 2003 AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety study. Two-thirds of drivers with suspended licenses still drive. To combat the problem the foundation recommended strengthening laws that impound vehicles, remove license plates on arrest, mandate ignition interlocks, use special plates to identify repeat offenders, use checkpoints to check licenses and prevent vehicle registration by drivers without valid licenses. By January 2004, 43 states had passed ignition interlock laws, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Interlocks are devices that, when blown into, measure a driver's blood alcohol and prevent a car from starting if alcohol is detected. Twenty-nine states mandate that drivers with multiple offenses forfeit their vehicles if found driving while impaired by alcohol. If you get pulled over and your blood-alcohol level is above the legal limit, you'll be arrested for drunk driving. If that leads to a conviction, you'll probably get socked with much higher insurance premiums if they let you drive at all. This calculator helps you figure out what your blood-alcohol content would be if you drank a specific number of drinks over a certain period of time. Remember, this is just an approximation. The calculator has to make certain assumptions, such as drinking all that alcohol on an empty stomach. If you eat while you drink, the alcohol is absorbed more slowly into your bloodstream. In any case, studies have shown that impairment begins with the first drink. Alcohol affects everyone differently. If you don't normally drink, a single beer could put you out of commission. For the most part, by the time you feel drunk, you're well past the legal limit. In general, the more you weigh, the more you'd have to drink before you'd be considered drunk. Consider this: A 210-pound male could drink six beers in an hour and still not be legally drunk in some states. His blood-alcohol content would be 0.0984. If a 150-pound man drank the same amount, his blood-alcohol content would be 0.14258 nearly 1 times the legal limit. Gender also affects your blood-alcohol content. The female counterpart to a 150-pound drunken male would have a blood-alcohol content of 0.17097 after consuming six drinks in an hour. 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OUILMichigan Drunk Driving Defense Lawyer | OUIL DUI DWI OWI MIP Defense Law Attorney | The International Drivers License Scam Get Help Now! Greater Detroit Area " Greater Detroit Area Greater Detroit Area "Patrick T. Barone Site Navigation Return Home DUI Defenses DUI Sample Cases DUI Attorney Info DUI Resources DUI Courts Info DUI Driver License DUI Links Patrick stands as a final refuge against overly zealous law enforcement. -R.S. The International Drivers License Scam The old adage of "if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is" is appropriate once again. The Internet is full of fantastic-sounding offers of licenses that can never be revoked or suspended, but such offers are full of misinformation and outright lies. "Unfortunately, I get at least one call per week from the child of an unsuspecting older American, who was emailed a message that looked pretty official. The parent responds and often gives out a credit card number, thinking they need these permits when they travel abroad" says Bridgeport, Connecticut DUI attorney James O. Ruane. "I think it is a result of the proliferation of spam email and the increasing numbers of older adults who are expanding their horizons by learning about the Internet." Thousands of fake International Driver Permits (IDPs) are sold each year to unsuspecting victims. Preying upon people with poor driving records, these scam artists falsely claim that their document will authorize buyers to drive legally in the U.S, even if they don't have a state-issued license or if their state-issued license has been suspended or revoked. These scam artists also claim that their document can be used to avoid points or fines affecting state-issued licenses and can be used as legal photo identification. All of these claims are false, however. If you are a U.S. resident, an IDP is not valid within the United States. IDPs are not intended to replace state-issued driver's licenses and should only be used as a supplement to a valid license when traveling to a foreign country. Contrary to what these scam artists would like you to believe, IDPs are not legal proof of identity. Some issuers of fake IDPs use another country as the "residence" country in an attempt to avoid the restriction that IDPs cannot be used in your home country. This misrepresentation can lead to legal difficulties if you are ever pulled over by the police in the U.S. and show a false IDP from some other country. The IDP will show that you live in that other country, however your car registration will show you as a U.S. resident. Lying to the police about your place of residence is a crime and could result in legal action. The IDP is a legitimate document when issued by the proper authorities but it is not an alternative to a state-issued license. An IDP is simply a translation of a regular license into another languageit is not a driver's license by itself but helps foreign police read licenses in other languages. When traveling to a foreign country, you must still carry a valid U.S. license, which is considered your true driver's license. Countries where English is the spoken language, such as Great Britain, Ireland, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, do not require an IDP. However, insurance companies in many other jurisdictions often require IDPs to cover foreign drivers of vehicles driven there. When you purchase an IDP you do not get a new, separate driving recordyour record stays with you, so an IDP cannot be used to hide violations or tickets. These infractions are still recorded on your regular driver's license. A real IDP must be purchased in your home country and you must be over 18 years of age and hold a valid license issued by a U.S. state or territory in order to purchase an IDP. In the United States, only two organizations are allowed to sell IDPs: the American Automobile Association and the American Automobile Touring Alliance, which offers IDPs through its National Automobile Club . The cost for a real IDP is approximately $10.00. IDP scams will only cease if the operators are forced to shut down by the authorities. If you have been a victim of this type of scam, you should report the incident to the office of your local U.S. Postal Inspector, the Better Business Bureau or your state or local Attorney General's office. Return Home
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DUI InsurancePennsylvania DUI Guide: Car Insurance Everything You Need to Know About First Offender DUI / DWI, Drinking Driving and Drugs Home | State By State Help | DUI Lawyers | Insurance Help | Breath Testers | DUI Videos Other States Pennsylvania Topics Pennsylvania DUI Pennsylvania Car Insurance Pennsylvania DUI Lawyers Google Search Results Pennsylvania Auto Insurance Since 1993, InsureMe has helped countless consumers save money on their auto insurance. Fast, easy and free. With our free service, enter your information once and you are instantly matched with the most competitive companies in the business. You'll get back up to five quotes so you can compare and save. At InsureMe, we shop your insurance so you don't have to. Your privacy is important to us. At InsureMe, we use the highest level of security available to safeguard your personal information. We hate spam just as much as you do, so we'll never sell or rent your email address for mass marketing. Why not get started today? Get Quote Now Home > State By State Help > Pennsylvania DUI > Car Insurance DISCLAIMER : This website provides only general information intended for those charged with drunk driving offenses. The information and news items on the site are for information only. This information is not legal advice, nor is it intended to create any binding advisory relationship. Do not take action based upon this information unless you consult with an attorney or other specialist. © 2005 Drivers Research Institute All Rights Reserved Send eMail Advertise With Us
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