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rebound wrote:The boat ride waz nice, he wanted to do it twice...
Put yourself in the scenario as an officer, what is your priority, medical attention for the injured or administering a breath test. A blood sample can be obtained once the driver agrees.hong kong phooey wrote:lol at no breathalyzer being administered. For a single road with so many party places from Thursday to Sunday i wonder how many times they have tests there . they will get a pay cut if the start administering test on that strip
Yet in south the picking on the little bars in back roads when the not getting grease .
Hope you never get into an accidentnick639v2 wrote:^breathalyser first... Then i guh know how much to care bout he life
shake d livin wake d dead wrote:Wah went on with the driver doh?
bluefete wrote:shake d livin wake d dead wrote:Wah went on with the driver doh?
Driver free to drive.
Overtaking traffic, lost control, crashed through barrier, then into the sea.
Prolly had a guuuud time on de boat!
hustla_ambition101 wrote:Put yourself in the scenario as an officer, what is your priority, medical attention for the injured or administering a breath test. A blood sample can be obtained once the driver agrees.hong kong phooey wrote:lol at no breathalyzer being administered. For a single road with so many party places from Thursday to Sunday i wonder how many times they have tests there . they will get a pay cut if the start administering test on that strip
Yet in south the picking on the little bars in back roads when the not getting grease .
Yes, the EHS are called in, but depending on a person's condition the officer would determine whether the person is good enough to be breath tested. A car went down into water where the extent of internal injuries are not known, nobody with an iota of sense will be studying to call a breath technician to a scene when the person has to be taken to hospital. There are provisions in the law for refusals to be tested.De Dragon wrote:hustla_ambition101 wrote:Put yourself in the scenario as an officer, what is your priority, medical attention for the injured or administering a breath test. A blood sample can be obtained once the driver agrees.hong kong phooey wrote:lol at no breathalyzer being administered. For a single road with so many party places from Thursday to Sunday i wonder how many times they have tests there . they will get a pay cut if the start administering test on that strip
Yet in south the picking on the little bars in back roads when the not getting grease .
So, no breathalyzer, she refuses a blood sample, what then? Also are the Police the ones for "medical attention?" Unless she was critically injured, don't they call the EHS?
A breathalyser just shows the percentage of alcohol in breath, many charges can be proffered to someone causing injury to another in an accident without someone being drunk.pugboy wrote:So if he caused another driver to be injured and no breathalyzer
Then no charges , just usual loss of control and salt for the other victim driver....
hustla_ambition101 wrote:Yes, the EHS are called in, but depending on a person's condition the officer would determine whether the person is good enough to be breath tested. A car went down into water where the extent of internal injuries are not known, nobody with an iota of sense will be studying to call a breath technician to a scene when the person has to be taken to hospital. There are provisions in the law for refusals to be tested.De Dragon wrote:hustla_ambition101 wrote:Put yourself in the scenario as an officer, what is your priority, medical attention for the injured or administering a breath test. A blood sample can be obtained once the driver agrees.hong kong phooey wrote:lol at no breathalyzer being administered. For a single road with so many party places from Thursday to Sunday i wonder how many times they have tests there . they will get a pay cut if the start administering test on that strip
Yet in south the picking on the little bars in back roads when the not getting grease .
So, no breathalyzer, she refuses a blood sample, what then? Also are the Police the ones for "medical attention?" Unless she was critically injured, don't they call the EHS?
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