April 23, 2024

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Sensor could stop drunk drivers from driving vehicle

Sensor could stop drunk drivers from driving vehicle

A seat belt is a safety harness designed to secure the occupant of a vehicle against harmful movement that may result from a collision or a sudden stop.

It’s not as earth-shaking as 1966, when every new car sold in the U.S. suddenly needed seat belts.

Still, the latest auto-safety gizmo has car buffs ranting about freedom versus “the nanny state.”

New cars sold in 2026 are expected to need a techno-spy onboard, checking whether the driver is too drunk to drive. Critics, including some fans of the magazines Car and Driver and Road and Track, say that amounts to Big Brother spying on Americans.

“We can’t idiot-proof this world!” ranted one online naysayer. Enforcing laws already on the books should be enough, others said. 

For some motorists caught inebriated behind the wheel, the criminal justice system does seem to work. For others, their drinking and driving don’t stop with one arrest, or two, or even half a dozen. Despite laws and sentences that grew increasingly stiffer since the founding of Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD)  in 1980, some habitual drunks keep going and going, especially if they can hire good lawyers.

Candy Lightner, founder and president of (MADD) Mothers Against Drunk Driving, is flanked by members of Congress and the administration as she addresses a rally on Capitol Hill, on June 13, 1984, in Washington to seek the support of legislation that would raise the drinking age to 21. Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., and Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole, at far right, stand in support with Lightner to support the legislation.

Consider the case of Derrick Okonmah of Clarkston, Clarkson, who is himself a lawyer. Actually, consider the 11 cases involving alcohol in which Okonmah, 44, has been pulled over since 2010. Through his attorney, Okonmah declined to comment for this story.

Okonmah hasn’t killed or even injured anyone. So he hasn’t attracted the attention of the Kentucky man who died in a deadly crash three years ago that wiped out an entire Dearborn family returning from Disney World. That crash drew nationwide attention, spurring U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell, who knew the family, to sponsor a law signed late last year by President Joe Biden. It requires automakers to install sensors on future models that will disable a car being driven by someone who’s inebriated or otherwise unable to drive.

More:How Northville family’s tragedy could force automakers to help end drunken driving

More:Michigan House approves hands-free driving bills, bans social media posting and driving

The Abbas family, of Northville, was killed after the car they were traveling in was hit by a wrong-way driver on I-75 near Lexington, Kentucky around 2:30 a.m. on Sunday, January 6, 2018.

The driving history of motorists such as Okonmah shows a pattern of serial offenses that MADD says almost invariably leads to crashes, and that Dingell determined must be stopped. Okonmah has racked up driving arrests involving alcohol in at least 11 locales in Oakland, Washtenaw, and Clinton counties. According to police reports and court documents, he has been clocked at 100 mph on U.S. 23; repeatedly exhaled blood-alcohol levels that Michigan law calls “super drunk” — at or above .17, which is more than double Michigan’s threshold for drunken driving of .08; and he has often been caught with open bottles of alcohol in his vehicle.