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According to news articles, the husband of Teresa Giudice, one of the stars in the well-known Bravo television series “Real Housewives,” was recently charged with driving while intoxicated after the man crashed his vehicle into a utility pole minutes from the couple’s home in Montville, New Jersey. Based on police reports, the accident occurred on the morning of Thursday, January 14, in Towaco.

Giuseppe Giudice was reportedly heading north on Jacksonville Road when the Ford pickup he was driving hit the utility pole just before 2am. According to Montville police, when officers arrived at the scene they detected the odor of alcohol on the 39-year-old driver. Due to the man’s possible injuries, the police did not make Giudice perform any field sobriety tests.

Based on the news, Giudice told police he had been in New York and was heading home when the accident occurred. Emergency personnel treated and then transported him to Morristown Memorial Hospital to be checked for internal injuries.

A DWI-related single-vehicle crash in Swainton, NJ, resulted in the driver being sent to the hospital with minor injuries as well as causing an area-wide power outage. Police handling the case say that the driver has been charged with driving while intoxicated (DWI). As a drunk driving defense attorney serving residents of New Jersey, I have seen the result of many such accidents.

In this case, the crash occurred, according to police reports, when a pickup truck belonging to Mathew Paschal of Cape May Court House, drifted off the southbound side of Route 9, leaving the roadway and crashing into two telephone poles that support several high voltage power lines in the area.

According to news reports, the accident occurred just before 6pm on New Year’s day when the 42-year-old driver’s Dodge pick-up left the roadway. Middle Township Police arrived at the scene not long after the accident and found the vehicle laying on the left side on the shoulder of the road. Tools and other equipment, apparently thrown from the vehicle’s bed area, were found lying near the crash site.

Driving while intoxicated, DWI or driving under the influence, whatever term you use it all adds up to lost driving privileges and extensive fines, not to mention possible job loss and being disgraced in the eyes of your family or local community. Here in New Jersey, being convicted of a drunk driving charge can result in a range of possible actions by the court to punish the convicted drunk driver.

As a New Jersey drunk driving defense attorney my firm represents hundreds of individuals every year in cases of driving under the influence of alcohol. A number of these cases involve human as well as social costs. Even under the best of circumstances, the financial cost of a DWI conviction can result in expensive court fines as well as higher insurance rates for years to come.

The stigma alone of a alcohol-related DWI or drug DUI conviction can affect a person’s standing in the community, possible loss of a job, or potential damage to relationships with family and friends.

As a New Jersey DWI defense lawyer, I should not have to tell anyone that injuring a police officer in a traffic-related incident can lead to serious consequences. Combine this kind of traffic offense with drunken driving and you have all the elements of a bad outcome for the motorist charged with driving while intoxicated. While this seems like a worst-case scenario, it happened recently in Middle Township, NJ.

According to new reports, a police corporal received serious injuries as a result of a collision caused by a supposedly drunk driver. The accident occurred on Saturday, January 2, when Middle Township Police received a call of a pedestrian-car traffic accident in front of a TJ Maxx in Cape May Court House. When officers arrived, they found that the injured pedestrian was an off-duty Middle Township Police officer, Corporal Fran Fiore.

Fiore was transported to Cape Regional Medical Center with serious leg injuries as a result of being pinned between two vehicles. Based on an investigation by police, Fiore was apparently parked in front of the TJ Maxx on the Route 9 side and was standing behind his minivan loading items through the open rear hatch. According to police reports, a Dodge 1500 pickup truck driven by 51-year-old Edward R. Williams backed into Fiore pinning the officer’s legs between the vehicles. Williams then pulled his vehicle forward and parked.

Northern New Jersey gets its share of drunk driving arrests. Depending on the situation, drivers can be stopped for reckless driving or failure to maintain their lane, after which the officer may decide that the driver is intoxicated. When a patrolman suspects that a motorist is driving under the influence of alcohol, prescription drugs or even marijuana or other illegal substances, he may request the driver to take one or more field sobriety tests.

New Jersey DWI defense lawyer, as well as a former municipal prosecutor, I have a vast amount of experience in defending individuals who have been arrested and charged with drunken driving. While circumstances vary, many DWI arrest scenarios are quite similar. The following is a short list of recent drunk driving arrests from Clifton, NJ.

A 22-year-old Maplewood resident was arrested and charged with driving while intoxicated (DWI) in the early morning hours of December 29. According to reports, Officer Daniel Ishak approached a vehicle stopped on Clifton and Van Houten avenues around 2am and found the driver allegedly unconscious behind the wheel of this vehicle with the engine running. The officer opened the door and detected signs of intoxication, according to reports. The officer woke the man and gave him several roadside field sobriety tests, which he apparently was not able to complete. The officer arrested the driver. He was charged with DWI after recording a blood-alcohol content (BAC) of 0.16 percent on a breathalyzer.

It’s no secret that driving while intoxicated in the New Jersey area can be hazardous to the person who has been drinking, as well as others on the road. Secondarily, the penalties for DWI in the Garden State can carry heavy fines and even jail time.

Although most people do not intend to be charged with drunk driving, the penalties for operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol are designed to penalize anyone who breaks the state’s drunken driving laws. As a New Jersey DWI defense lawyer, many of the people whom I have represented over the years are first-time drunk driving offenders.

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), last year 154 people were killed in automobile collisions that involved at least one intoxicated person. That figure is reportedly down from 2007, in which 201 people died in DWI-related accidents. 2008 is the latest year for which complete statistics are available. In addition, drunken driving arrests dropped six percent, based on data provided by the state police.

Now that we’re several days into the New Year, I’ll say it once again: New Jersey law enforcement agencies and local police continue cracking down on drunken driving around our state. New Year’s Eve may be one of the more common times to find motorists drinking and driving, but every day has the potential for many drivers to be caught driving under the influence of alcohol.

As a New Jersey DWI defense attorney, I and my staff spend our days defending people accused of driving while intoxicated or driving under the influence of prescription drugs. Whether deliberate or not, the police and society have virtually no tolerance for this kind of traffic offense. A recent news article highlighted just a few of the countless DWI arrests that occurred throughout New Jersey this past New Years.

Based on preliminary police reports, there were at least 10 drunken driving arrests on the roadways in Bergen and Passaic counties as the clock struck midnight and people from all over rang in 2010. And while it appears that DWI-related fatal accidents were down this year, there were numerous drunk driving arrests throughout the evening and early morning hours of January 1.

Drunken driving, or DWI (driving while intoxicated), is a serious offense in New Jersey. From Atlantic City to Newark, law enforcement agencies and state legislators are getting more and more tough with people who drive under the influence of alcohol. As a New Jersey drunk driving defense lawyer, I and my colleagues understand the dangers of driving under the influence of alcohol or prescription drugs (DUI or drug DWI).

Recently, the New Jersey state legislature has taken on the task of making those convicted of fatal DWI traffic accidents go to jail and stay there longer. These days a conviction in the Garden State for operating a motor vehicle while inebriated is an expensive proposition; killing another person while drunk usually calls for jail time — soon that jail term may be longer than many expect.

According to news reports, a bill entitled “Josh’s and Craig’s Law” could increase the penalties for motorists who cause a fatality as a result of a DWI traffic accident. The new legislation is being sponsored in the state Senate by Senator Jeff Van Drew and in the Assembly by Assemblymen Matt Milam and Nelson Albano.

The bill takes its name from Josh Moren and Craig Lozier, who died within weeks of each other in similar DWI-related accidents in Cape May County last year. The common thread, according to news reports, is that these two individuals were apparently killed by drivers who allegedly were driving under the influence of a large amount of alcohol, or a mix of drugs and alcohol.

Moren, who was 18, died in June of 2008 along Route 47 in Middle Township just three weeks after graduating from Sacred Heart High School. He was killed by 48-year-old Laura Lippie of Bridgeton, NJ. Lippie is currently serving more than sevens years in prison at Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women.

According to news articles, the new law would mandate a minimum sentence of 10 years for an DWI offense involving high levels of intoxication, such as Lippie was convicted for. Based on court records, Lippie pleaded guilty to having spent the day before the accident drinking vodka. Her blood-alcohol content (BAC) at the time of the accident was measured at 0.37 percent — more than four times the legal limit.

Several weeks after Moren was killed, Lozier was hit by a drunk driver as he was riding a motorcycle on Route 47 near his home in Cape May Court House. Police reportedly filed DWI and drug possession and distribution charges against Nicholas Golden, the driver who hit Lozier. Golden was subsequently indicted on first-degree aggravated manslaughter charges, which carries between 10 and 30 years in prison. At the time of the news article, Golden was free on bail pending trial.
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More than a half million people live in Monmouth County, NJ. At 1,300 people per square mile, the number of DWI arrests can be staggering. Police pull over dozens of drunk drivers every week, many of which are convicted of driving while intoxicated, then fined and even sentenced to some jail time. As a New Jersey DWI defense attorney, my law firm has broad experience defending individuals accused of driving under the influence of alcohol, as well as those motorists charged with drug DUI.

Local police departments as well as state law enforcement agencies throughout the Garden State have demonstrated a rather low tolerance for motorists who are caught driving while intoxicated. The following police blotter listing is just a sampling of the various types of DWI and drug DUI arrests that my office handles throughout the year.

Tinton Falls

In New Jersey the law covering underage drinking and driving leaves little to the imagination. An individual must be 21 years of age or older to buy, be in possession or consume any type of alcohol-containing drink or beverage. In short: underage drinking is unequivocally defined as illegal. Because the state has such a strong stance against underage drinking, the legal consequences for this activity are severe under New Jersey law, especially when it comes to operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol.

Whether or not a youth is stopped for DWI, simply being convicted of drinking as a minor could affect that child’s future driving privileges. As a New Jersey drunk driving defense lawyer, I know the negative impact that DWI and underage DWI can have on an individual now and in the future. For kids, this is not an area of the law they would want to experience. As a parent, it would behoove you to talk to your child about the consequences of underage drinking and underage DWI.

In this state, if a person under 21 years old is arrested for purchasing or consuming an alcoholic drink in an establishment licensed to sell alcohol, he or she could be fined $500, as well as lose their driver’s license for up to six months. Parents take note here, because even if your child does not yet have a driver’s license that potential suspension will start when the youngster is first eligible to receive his or her license. Furthermore, a young person who violates underage drinking laws may also be required by the court to attend an alcohol treatment or education program.

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