Welcome to Gaia! :: View User's Journal | Gaia Journals

 
 

View User's Journal

wkdtapbqotjv Journal
wkdtapbqotjv Personal Journal
Attorney Search
During his time on the police force, he has served on patrol, worked gang enforcement and spent more than six years as a member of various investigative units.

Saturation patrols, in contrast, send the officers out to streets, allowing them to concentrate just on the drivers who show signs of intoxication.

Bradley knew it was time for a Breathalyzer test. He pulled the yellow box containing the testing kit out of the back of his Explorer.

Friday night’s checkpoint in Ontario was one of 58 DUI checkpoints and saturation patrols police in San Bernardino County have scheduled for December as part of an aggressive “Winter Holiday DUI Campaign.”

For example, San Bernardino hosted 18 or 20 checkpoints in 2013 and 12 in 2014, according to Cervantes.

A few minutes after 6:30 p.m., Bradley was seatbelted into his cruiser and scanning the treeline in Lawrence Park with a car-mounted flashlight. Bradley approached her and began a round of simple tests.

Advertisement

Those answers are never clear ahead of time, but this is actually an ideal shift for Bradley.

While on patrol, Bradley searches for intoxicated drivers using a kind of hybrid technique.

On a recent Saturday night, Bradley took on an extra shift to conduct a DUI saturation patrol. He was promoted to corporal in February. "That makes me feel like we as police officers are doing our jobs and getting the right messages out."

First, the eye test. But with the help of one of the woman's friends standing nearby, Bradley administered the test.

They're driving badly. San Bernardino tends to have eight to 10 officers working the patrols, costing roughly $7,400 in grant money per operation, according to Cervantes.

“We’re going to do our best to keep the people safe this holiday season,” said Vicki Cervantes, a San Bernardino police traffic sergeant, who was also working a checkpoint Friday night.

Then there's sit-and-wait, where Bradley parks in a quiet lot on a busy street and closely watches cars passing by.

During the patrols, officers drive around town, usually in high-trafficked areas or near nightlife, and search for driver’s showing signs of impairment.

When the average citizen gets behind the wheel, the focus is all about the destination -- getting from Point A to Point B.

While heading south on Cherokee Lane from Turner Road at around 8 p.m., Bradley spotted a car that read more showed at least three signs the driver could be under the influence.

Now he's a patrol officer, a member of the auxiliary bike team and a public information officer.

He compared being on patrol to a kind of urban hunting trip. Their 58 details are part of 338 checkpoint and saturation patrols that will occur this holiday season in San Bernardino, Los Angeles, Riverside, Orange and Ventura counties.

Finally, a walking test. “The holidays are kind of the high peak,” said Ontario Cprl. His time was paid for by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety.

If any other officers on the shift pulled over a drunken driving suspect, they were instructed to call Bradley and get him on the case.

Both the checkpoints and patrols do not decrease the amount of officers on regular patrol. Or they'll do the opposite: Stop at a green light, or lingering too long at a stop sign as though they are waiting for the light to change.

There, she was booked into the jail for a few hours. Depending on a court's decision, the woman could face between four days and six months in county jail, $1,800 to $4,000 in fines and penalties, three to five years of probation and a required class of three, six or nine months.

The woman's result was well over the legal limit of 0.08 blood-alcohol content, even after several tests. Back on the road, Bradley pulls over to grab a burrito from Taqueria El Grullense on Sacramento Street, then pulls into a quiet lot on Lockeford Street to watch traffic and eat dinner. His final tally for the night was five cars pulled over, two DUI suspects arrested and two arrests made for outstanding warrants.

Ontario generally staffs between four and 13 officers for a saturation patrol. Loud music blares through the speakers from the FM 98.5 Rock radio station.

The only thing separating a misdemeanor DUI and a felony offense is that the misdemeanor cases don't hurt anyone else, he said.

"If I don't locate a DUI, it makes me wonder how many I missed," he said.

HITTING THE STREETS

Or maybe it means the police department is doing well in educating the public.

That makes for a long and unforgiving workday. Saturday to 2:30 a.m. Would these long hours lead to any arrests? And what other kinds of criminal activity might Bradley run into while pulling over read more suspicious vehicles?

This doesn't account for other potential expenses, including lost work time, any bail fees, or the costs of injury or damage a driver convicted of a DUI might have caused.

To Bradley, that's a job well done.

AN ARREST IN THE FIELD

That's the organization that funds dozens of DUI checkpoints every year, where police officers set up shop in the middle of the road to check licenses and talk to drivers face-to-face.

The federal government funds the checkpoints and San Bernardino’s grant, Cervantes said, requires them to hold at least one enforcement operation during the holiday season.

A Lodi man is currently awaiting trial for an October 2013 collision that took the lives of six members of the Miranda family: the father, the mother, her unborn child and three young children. Bradley held up a finger and the driver followed it with her eyes. The driver was instructed to walk heel to toe for nine steps, turn around and walk back. For DUIs, that's the major thoroughfares of Lodi.

But what is he looking for? What are these drivers doing that indicate to Bradley that they may have had one too many drinks to be out on the road?

Due to a language barrier and the woman's inebriated state, it was difficult to explain the test. The grants pay officers overtime to work read more the enforcement operations.

San Bernardino County’s operations are part of a larger crackdown on impaired drivers. Or tried to. It could potentially save lives, he said.

A woman in a black jacket and jeans stepped out of the my blog driver's seat, unaware that a police officer had pulled up behind her. That means they might take a very wide or a very tight turn, sometimes sideswiping another vehicle.

These are the kinds of cases Bradley hopes DUI patrols can prevent. The woman stood on one leg while facing upward with her eyes closed and counting out 30 seconds. If drivers passed the brief test, they were waved through. Like anyone else out hunting, officers have to look where the highest concentration of targets is likely to be. Then Bradley slowly moved his finger toward her nose and watched as the woman tried to keep her eyes focused on it. If not, police escorted them across the street for further questioning.

Bradley is happy to keep pulling dangerous drivers off the road, no matter what monetary costs read more they might have to pay. Sunday, Bradley's entire focus was on watching for erratically moving cars and assessing potentially intoxicated drivers.

Sometimes DUI suspects will stop past the limit line at an intersection or run a red light. Bradley arrested her, called in backup to deal with her car, and took the woman to the police station on Elm Street.

When the driver pulled a fast left turn into the Franco's Pizza parking lot, failing to yield to oncoming traffic and forcing other drivers to slam on their brakes, Bradley flipped on his lights and followed.

Next, a balance test. Fred Alvarez, citing the abundance of parties this time of year.

“There’s generally more arrests on patrols,” she said.

"I can only assume people are walking because they want to be safe, and (don't want) to risk their lives or other people's lives by driving," he said. Eric Bradley climbs into the front seat of his department-issued Ford Explorer, he has a different mission in mind: to locate potentially dangerous drivers and get them off the road.. It didn't work.

"It is one of my favorite activities that I really hope one day I don't have to do anymore," Bradley said.

At a brightly lit intersection, an officer asked to see a driver’s license, gave a subtle sniff of the motorist’s breath and looked for any obvious signs of intoxication. She made it about seven steps, then clumsily lost count and turned too soon.

Between moments of adrenaline-fueled activity, this is the shift: staying calm and watching closely.

Oh, and one meth pipe thrown out the window of a car just before Bradley pulled it over.

While on that Saturday night patrol, Bradley noticed groups of people walking home from Downtown, and climbing into cabs outside of bars and tasting rooms.

There's free patrol, where he drives up and down Ham Lane, Kettleman Lane, Cherokee Lane and Lower Sacramento Road, as well as a few of the busier side read more streets and through Downtown.

Thanks to these patrols and the ever-watchful eyes of officers on patrol, Lodi police arrested 282 people on DUI charges in 2013.

The shift ran over time by two hours, keeping Bradley away from home and a warm bed until after 4:30 a.m. Her foot hit the ground several times, and she didn't estimate the time passing properly.

Ontario and San Bernardino hosted checkpoints Friday but the majority of the 58 enforcement details are saturation patrols, reflecting a larger trend of departments choosing patrols over checkpoints, which require more manpower and space.

Bradley has lived in Lodi for 10 years, but has been a member of the Lodi Police Department for 14 years. Drunken drivers tend to be incapable of maintaining a steady speed, and have a hard time judging distances. Sunday. Let's see what we get," Bradley said.

But when Lodi police Cpl. A report had come in of an intoxicated man walking near the park, but there was no one around who matched the description.

"I enjoy doing (DUI patrols) because I think when cops arrest a DUI suspect, they are preventing a felony from occurring," Bradley said.

"It's a full moon out tonight behind those clouds. Ryan Morales will be arraigned on counts of second-degree murder, gross vehicular manslaughter and driving under the influence.

From 6:30 p.m





 
 
Manage Your Items
Other Stuff
Get GCash
Offers
Get Items
More Items
Where Everyone Hangs Out
Other Community Areas
Virtual Spaces
Fun Stuff
Gaia's Games
Mini-Games
Play with GCash
Play with Platinum