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IGNITION INTERLOCKS How To Use Them Effectively to Reduce Drunk Driving

IGNITION INTERLOCKS How To Use Them Effectively to Reduce Drunk Driving. Richard Roth, PhD. Research Supported By NM TSB, NHTSA, PIRE, RWJ, and MADD. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute October 23-4, 2012. This Is What We Want To Prevent. Drunk Driver Plows into Mexican Bike Race

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IGNITION INTERLOCKS How To Use Them Effectively to Reduce Drunk Driving

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  1. IGNITION INTERLOCKS How To Use Them Effectively to Reduce Drunk Driving

    Richard Roth, PhD Research Supported By NM TSB, NHTSA, PIRE, RWJ, and MADD Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute October 23-4, 2012
  2. This Is What We Want To Prevent Drunk Driver Plows into Mexican Bike Race One Dead, 10 Injured , June 1, 2008 Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  3. My Goal isto Reduce Drunk Driving by research to identify… and advocacy to implement… the most effective, cost-effective and fair initiatives. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  4. Give yourselves a round of Applause! Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  5. Alcohol-Impaired-Driving Fatalities 1400 in Region 5 in 2010 ~14% of 10,288 in U.S. …Normalized to Miles Driven Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  6. Worse Better Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute 2010 FARS Data; Plot by Roth
  7. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  8. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  9. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  10. Interlocks Up Fatalities Down Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  11. Federal Laws vs. Research Before 2012 1. No interlock without prior period of hard license revocation for subsequent offenders. 2. Interlocked offenders may only drive to work, school, or treatment. 1A. Interlocks are more effective than hard revocation. 1B. Most revoked offenders drive while revoked, DWR. 1C. Offenders learn that they can get by with DWR. 2A. Ignored and Ineffectual 2B. Reduces sober-driving training. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  12. 2012 Highway Bill Removes Restrictions and Offers Grants Hard-revocation-period-before-interlock for subsequent offenders has been removed. Federal restrictions on where and when an interlocked offender may drive have been removed. Federal grants will be given to states that enforce an all-offender interlock law. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  13. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  14. 1. General DeterrenceChanging Societal Attitudes Anti-DWI Advertising Prevention Programs The General Deterrent Effects of DWI Sanctions Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  15. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  16. 2. Convict More Of Those Arrested Training of police in collecting and presenting evidence of DWI Video cameras on police cars . Eliminate shortages of prosecutors. Publicize records of judges who have the least recidivism of the offenders they adjudicate Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  17. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  18. 3. Specific DeterrenceReduce Recidivism Ignition Interlock Sanctions License Revocation Community Service & Victim Impact Panels Alcohol Screening and Assessment Supervised Probation, SCRAM, 24/7 Treatment DWI Courts Jail Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  19. An Ignition Interlock is anElectronic Probation Officer Dedicated Probation Officer in Front Seat On duty 24 hours per day Tests and Records daily BAC’s Allows only Alcohol-Free Persons to Drive Reports All Violations to the Court/MVD Costs Offender only $2.30 per day (1 less drink per day) Punishes Probation Violations Immediately Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  20. Why Interlock Drunk Drivers? Interlocks are the most effective DWI sanction They are the most cost-effective sanction They are perceived as fair Better than Hard License Revocation They are paid for by offenders They supply supervised probation. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  21. Interlocks are Effective, Cost-Effective and Fair Interlocks reduce DWI re-arrests by 40-90% They reduce the economic impact of drunk driving by $3 to $7 for every $1 of cost. Interlocks are perceived as a fair sanction by 81% of over 15,000 offenders surveyed. ..But they only work if… you get them installed. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  22. What Works? All DWI offenders must be included Must be mandatory not just voluntary Avoid hoops: (pre-requisites to interlock) Close loopholes Compliance-Based-Removal Triage to stiffer (and more costly) penalties Indigent support Promotion of General Deterrence Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  23. First Offenders are Biggest Problem Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  24. BAC Distributions by Arrest Number Are Similar Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  25. Main Key to an Effective Program The key to an effective interlock program is simply getting interlocks installed in the vehicles of arrested drunk drivers. Nothing else…( reporting, inspecting, sanctioning, monitoring)… is as important. These extra program components definitely add effectiveness, but they should be added only to the extent that funds are available. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  26. Recidivism: Interlock vs. Hard Revocation Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  27. Administrative and/or Judicial In administrative programs, MVD’s revoke licenses of arrested and/or convicted DWI offenders but allow them to drive legally while revoked if they install interlocks. In judicial programs, judges mandate that convicted offenders install interlocks as a condition of probation. Some states have both in series (e.g. Florida) or parallel (e.g. New Mexico). Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  28. Basic Administrative Program An Interlock Licensing Law that makes an interlock license available to anyone revoked for DWI who installs an interlock Permits driving anywhere anytime in a vehicle with a functioning interlock License Fee offsets MVD costs Problems Only 10-20% will install. The worst offenders will not. Most offenders will choose revocation over interlock. HOOPS: Pre-Interlock requirements will further reduce compliance. There will be little overall reduction in drunk driving. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  29. Enhanced Administrative Program Compliance Based Removal; eg 6 months and 5000 miles of no recorded BAC’s > 0.04% Requirement for unlimited license Reinstatement Vehicle Forfeiture for driving while revoked without an interlock. No Hoops (pre-interlock requirements) Problems It still is a voluntary program. Most offenders will choose to drive without a license. There is a low probability of apprehension for DWR. The worst offenders will not be interlocked. Result: many unlicensed and uninsured bad drivers Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  30. Basic Judicial Program Judicial option to mandate an Interlock sanction as a condition of probation. Problems Many judges will not mandate an interlock Many offenders will plea away interlock sanction Many offenders will just not comply. Offenders will claim “not driving” or “no car”. Those who need it most will not be interlocked. Result: many unlicensed and uninsured bad drivers Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  31. Enhanced Judicial Program Mandatory Judicial Interlock sanction as a condition of probation Installation report to court within 2 weeks One year for 1st, 2 yrs for 2nd, 3 yrs for 3rd, Lifetime for 4th. Compliance Based Removal: with carrots and sticks Home Photo Breathalyzer for those who claim “no car” or “not driving” (Alcohol-free breath twice per day) Offender financed indigent fund with objective standards Problems Such a program does not yet fully exist. Requires some administrative components Frequent monitoring reduces cost-effectiveness Possibility of pleas from DWI to careless or reckless Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  32. Add On’s Focus probation resources on those who do not install IID’s Criminal sanction for attempts to circumvent interlock IID probation review every six months Triage of sanctions for those who are not compliant. No pleas from DWI to careless or reckless driving Interlock as a condition of bond Suggested Triage for Non-Compliance Photo Interlock Require morning and evening breath tests Screening and Treatment if indicated Continuous Alcohol Monitoring (eg SCRAM or TAD) DWI Court Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  33. Best Practice Recommendation Combine previous four programs in PARALLEL Include “ADD ON’s” and Triage as funds permit Focus probation and MVD resources on those who do not install. Let the interlock sanction tests that are above set-point. Collect monthly reports, but only monitor circumvention. Collect data for research on effectiveness. DWI arrests and convictions license revocations and interlock licenses. Interlocks installed and removed A-I crashes, injuries, fatalities. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  34. Evidence of Effectiveness Recidivism After a DWI Arrest Recidivism After a DWI Conviction Overall Statewide Recidivism vs. Time Reduction in Alcohol-Involved Crashes Reduction in Alcohol-Involved Injuries Reduction in Alcohol-Involved Fatalities Correlation between Interlocks Installed and Measures of Drunk Driving New NHTSA Comparison Criteria: Alcohol-Impaired Driving Fatalities per 100 MVM Opinions of Interlocked Offenders Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  35. Model Ignition Interlock Programby Dick Roth October 10, 2012 page 1 of 2 Mandatory Interlocks as a condition of probation for all convicted offenders. 1 yr. for 1st, 2 yrs. for second, 3 yrs. for 3rd, and 5 yrs. for 4 or more. Electronic Sobriety Monitoring for convicted offenders who claim “no vehicle” or “not driving. Daily requirement of morning and evening alcohol-free breath tests as a condition of probation.(or $1000/yr. for supervised probation) An ignition interlock license available to all persons revoked for DWI with no other restrictions. Allow MVD to set fee to cover cost. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  36. Model Ignition Interlock Programby Dick Roth October 10, 2012 page 2/2 An Indigent Fund with objective standards such as eligibility for income support or food stamps. Vehicle immobilization or interlock between arrest and adjudication. Offender’s choice……. By voiding Vehicle Registration until interlock is installed or offender is adjudicated not guilty ..(Alternative: Interlock as a condition of bond) Vehicle forfeiture for driving a non-interlocked vehicle while revoked for DWI. Compliance Based Removal: No end to revocation period before satisfaction of at least one year of alcohol-free driving with an IID. (e.g.. ≥ 5000 miles and ≥ 1 year with no recorded BAC>0.05 by any driver) . Criminal sanction for circumvention of IID. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  37. VIII. 2. Recidivism vs Duration of Interlock….PRELIMINARY DATA 1 year is Best More than 2 years is best A year or more is best More than 2 years is best Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute From T4 101126.sav, T5 101128.spo
  38. Three year effectiveness of interlocks for first offenders by BAC http://www.rothinterlock.org/threeyeareffectivenessofinterlocks_forfirstoffendersby_bac.pdf Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  39. First Offenders are much more dangerous than the general population Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  40. III.3 Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  41. Evidence of Specific Deterrence Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  42. 4. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  43. 5. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  44. 6.NM Alcohol-Involved Fatalities Decreased 38% Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  45. 8. 38 % Reduction Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  46. 7. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  47. http://www.rothinterlock.org/2012surveyofcurrentlyinstalledinterlocksintheus.pdf http://www.rothinterlock.org/2012surveyofcurrentlyinstalledinterlocksintheus.pdf Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  48. I.2. Increase the Incentives AdministrativeIncentives Right to Drive Legally Required for an Unrestricted License Avoid Recording of First Conviction Shred Plate..Right to Re-register Vehicle Condition of Bond on arrest Condition of Probation on conviction Avoid Electronic Sobriety Monitoring Reduce or Avoid Jail time ~15% JudicialIncentives >70% Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  49. I.3. Eliminate HoopsNo Pre-requisites for Interlock Period of Hard Revocation (Re-define) Fines and Fees Paid Outstanding legal obligations Alcohol Screening and Assessment Medical Evaluation DWI School Victim Impact Panel Community Service Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  50. I.4. Close Loopholes Not convicted Waiting out Revocation Period “No Car” or “Not Driving” Excuse Driving While Revoked Driving a non-interlocked vehicle Few Warrants for Non-compliance Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  51. I.5. Triage Up in Sanctions Extension of Interlock Period Photo Interlock Home Photo Breathalyzer Continuous BAC monitoring Treatment House Arrest Jail Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  52. III.1. The New Mexico Laws 1999 Optional Judicial Mandate for 2nd and 3rd DWI 2002 Mandatory Judicial Sanction for 1st Aggravated and All Subsequent Offenders 2002 Indigent Fund 2003 Ignition Interlock License available for all revoked offenders with no waiting period. (Admin. Prog. For All) 2005 Mandatory Judicial Sanction: 1 yr for 1st; 2 yrs for 2nd; 3 yrs for 3rd; and lifetime with 5 yr review for 4+ 2005 ALR and JLR periods increased 2009 No Unrestricted License without Interlock Period 2010 Objective Standard for Indigency Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  53. III.6. What We Have Learned Given a choice, most offenders choose revocation over interlock …and they keep driving after drinking. First offenders must be included because they are 60% to 80% of all DWI offenders, and almost as likely to be re-arrested as subsequent offenders. There must be an Interlock License available ASAP. Revoked offenders are 3-4 times more likely to be re-arrested for DWI than interlocked offenders. Hard revocation periods just teach offenders that they can drive without being arrested. Judicial Mandates get more interlocks installed than Administrative requirements. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  54. V. Loopholes that Remain in NM “No Car” or “Not Driving” excuse SB306 2011 No interlock between arrest and adjudication (Learning, DWI, Absconding) SB308 2011 Ineffective Penalty for DWR ..SB307 2011 Possibility of waiting out revocation period without installing an interlock No Objective Standard for Indigency Insufficient Funding: Increase Alcohol Excise Tax Refusals and Drugs Warrants for BAC SB387 2011 Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  55. VIII.3. Sample of 15,109 Interlocked In New Mexico Arrested In Interlocked Vehicle N=~92 0.6% Arrested In Vehicle With a Different License Plate N=~287 1.9% Not Arrested While Interlocked N=14,730 97.5% Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  56. VIII.6. Who Dies in Alcohol-Impaired Crashes? Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  57. VI. Myths About First Offenders First Offenders Drove Drunk Once Are Not Alcohol Abusers or Alcoholics Are a Negligible Part of the DWI Problem Are Less Likely to be Re-Arrested Are Not Responsible for Most DWI Fatalities √ Interlocks are not cost-effective for them √ Interlocks are a not a fair sanction for them √ Interlocks are not effective for them √ Interlocks are too lenient. Revoke them Sanctions are more important than prevention Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  58. VI.1 First Offenders Are Not First Offenders They are multiple offenders who were finally caught. They have driven an average of 500 times after drinking before their first arrest. R. Roth. Anonymous surveys of convicted DWI offenders at Victim Impact Panels in Santa Fe, NM Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  59. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  60. VI. 4. First Offenders are Just as Dangerous as Subsequent Offenders Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  61. VI.5 What Fraction of Impaired Drivers in Fatal Crashes are First Offenders? NHTSA Definitions; Impaired Driver: BAC >= 0.08 First Offender: No BAC Conviction in Previous 3 Years. 92 % http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/Pubs/811155.pdf pp 4-5 Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  62. VI.10 The importance of Prevention and General Deterrents Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  63. VII. Truths About Young Offenders (Those Under 30) Have the highest DWI arrest rates Have the highest re-arrest rates Have the highest DWI crash rates Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  64. VII.1. DWI Citations Fall Off Dramatically With Age Underage drinkers do not have the highest arrest rate, but Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  65. VII.2 Those who have their first DWI before 21 have the highest 5 year re-arrest rate. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  66. VII.3. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  67. VIII. Miscellaneous Findings Females are an increasing fraction of DWI Longer interlock periods are more effective for subsequent offenders. How do interlocked offenders get re-arrested for DWI? Variations in Installation Rate by County. Crime and Punishment Who Dies in Alcohol-Impaired Crashes BAC Limits by Country Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  68. VIII.1. Female DWI’s in NM Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  69. 1. Recidivism After a DWI Arrest in NM 77% lower 78% lower 84% lower 76% lower Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  70. 2. Recidivism After a DWI Conviction Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  71. 3. Overall DWI Recidivism Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  72. 9. Survey of 1513 Interlocked Offenders% who responded agree or strongly agree with each of these statements 88% Helpful in avoiding another DWI 83% Helpful at reducing their drinking 89% Effective at reducing their drunk driving 72% All convicted DWI’s should have interlocks 63% All arrested DWI’s should have interlocks. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  73. Evidence of Cost-Effectiveness Cost of interlocks is less than one third of the savings in the economic impact of the drunk driving crashes prevented. Benefit/Cost ~3. National Research that takes into account benefits other than DWI crashes shows an even greater Benefit to Cost Ratio. In a survey of 1513 Interlocked offenders, 70% agree or strongly agree that The benefits of interlocks outweigh the costs. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  74. Evidence of Fairness Anonymous Survey of 1513Interlocked Offenders: 80% responded agreeor strongly agreeto: “Interlocks are a fair sanction for convicted DWI.” ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Anonymous Survey of 15,641 Convicted Offenderswhile waiting for Victim Impact Panels to start: 81% responded Yes to the question: “Do you think that interlocks are a fair sanction for DWI? Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  75. Where Should We Focus our Sanctions? In the past we have focused on Subsequent Offenders. Now we are Focusing on First Offenders Many more First Offenders are re-arrested than Subsequent Offenders because there are more First Offenders. Subsequent Offenders have a slightly higher re-arrest rate. Data from NM CTS, Plots by Roth 3/1/11 Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  76. Interlocked Offenders Have Less Recidivism For up to 8 Years After Arrest Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  77. I. Developing an Interlock Program Identify Goals Use Carrots and Sticks Eliminate Hoops Close Loopholes Triage Sanctions Research Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  78. I.6. ResearchMeasures of Effectiveness Interlocks per Arrested Offender Recidivism of Interlocked vs. Not Interlocked Reduction in Overall Recidivism Reduction in DWI Crashes Reduction in DWI Injuries Reduction in DWI Fatalities Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  79. GoalAn Effective, Cost-Effective, and Fair Ignition Interlock Program That Reduces Drunk Driving Crashes, Injuries, and Fatalities. Get interlocks installed ASAP after DWI. Get all offenders to install. Keep interlocks installed until there is evidence of changed behavior. Objectives in Performance Terms Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  80. Most Countries Have per se BAC Limits Below 0.08% Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_alcohol_content Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  81. After Thoughts Reaction Time Interlock for Drugged Drivers Diversion Program for first DWI, eg Oregon + Plate Removal on Arrest (leave at jail to be recovered with 1. contract of interlock installation, 2. successful administrative appeal or 3. Judicial dismissal.) Federal Grants for “Enforcing all-offender Interlock Law.” Define Enforcing as >50% inst. Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  82. VIII.4. Ratio for New Mexico 8169 / 9829 = 0.83 Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
  83. Richard Roth, PhDExecutive Director Impact DWIRichardRoth2300@msn.com Thank You! Impact DWI Websites www.ImpactDWI.org .www.PEDAforTeens.org Region 5 Ignition Interlock Institute
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