Driver racks up 2 DWI charges in single night

ryson

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Dec 22, 2001
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Talk about a rough day:eek:

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By OREN DORELL, Staff Writer

A Raleigh man was arrested twice Friday morning on charges of drunken driving -- once after an accident and again three hours later after returning to his car and driving it away from where it was parked.

"It was absolutely terrible," Sougata Mukherjee , editor of the Triangle Business Journal, said Friday afternoon, summing up a night that began at Sullivan's Steakhouse on Glenwood Avenue. "This is the first time something like this has happened to me."

Mukherjee's first arrest occurred after his 2001 Nissan Pathfinder rear-ended a 2001 Saab driven by Winston Cavin, a News & Observer night metro editor who was on his way home from work. There were no injuries.

The accident occurred near the intersection of Glenwood Avenue and Lead Mine Road at 12:34 a.m., Raleigh Police Officer C.M. Warner wrote on Mukherjee's arrest warrant.

According to court documents, Mukherjee, 39, of 8910-210 Half Moon Court in Raleigh, smelled of alcohol and registered 0.16 on a breath test -- twice the legal limit. He was transported to the Wake County jail, where his license was seized and revoked because of the DWI charge, and he was released on a written promise to appear.

It is not clear where he went from there, but about 3:45 a.m., Mukherjee was behind the wheel of his Nissan again when he was stopped by the same officer at Creedmoor and Lynn roads in North Raleigh, according to a second arrest report.

That time, he registered 0.11 on the breath test. He was arrested and booked on a second DWI charge and on a charge of driving while his license was revoked, according to court records. His car was seized.

Mukherjee's driving record is otherwise clean in North Carolina, according to Division of Motor Vehicles records. A single DWI conviction usually carries a minimum sentence of 24 hours in jail or a treatment program and a one-year license revocation.

Asked why he returned to his car, Mukherjee replied, "I was in total shock. I don't know."

After the second arrest, he was placed in the pretrial release program, a court-administered program that enforces court dates and good behavior with the threat of jail time. He was released into the custody of a sober adult sometime after 7 a.m.

Mukherjee said he told his boss about the incident but has not learned whether there will be any consequences.
 
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loophole

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not as rare as you might think. i've had about 8-10 such cases in my 23 year career as a criminal defense attorney. they almost always involve someone being arrested for dwi, released on bond, and returning to retrieve their car from roadside, only to be rearrested by the same officer who had returned to stake out the car and wait for just such a dumbass move.
 

ctownguy

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No disrespect loophole, but as a defense attorney, I'm sure you did everything you could to get these dumbasses "off"

Just an observation:eek:
 

loophole

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you're right ctownguy, i did. i suppose they should have just been imprisoned without trial, right? think of the tax money we can save and just let the cops take them straight from arrest to prison.
 

THE KOD

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loophole said:
you're right ctownguy, i did. i suppose they should have just been imprisoned without trial, right? think of the tax money we can save and just let the cops take them straight from arrest to prison.
........................................

I would just have to say fry them dumbasses.


KOD
 
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