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Drunken driving checkpoint yields 9 DUI arrests Thursday

Checkpoint was dedicated to a UMBC student killed by a drunken driver

By Kara Estelle

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Published: Monday, September 28, 2009

Updated: Monday, September 28, 2009

Checkpoint.4

Matthew Creger/The Diamondback

A driver traveling north on Route 1 on Thursday night would have encountered an unexpected sight: a photo of a smiling college-age girl.

The photo of Amanda Moore, a University of Maryland, Baltimore County, student who was killed by a drunk driver four years ago when she was 22, was placed at the front of a sobriety checkpoint set up by University Police.

As Moore’s family and friends watched, police arrested nine people for driving under the influence between 11 p.m. and 3 a.m. Friday morning. Her parents, who drove eight hours from Myrtle Beach, S.C., felt every arrest was a personal victory, cheering as drivers were walked in handcuffs to the police station.

“The fact that they’ve dedicated this to Amanda is just a huge thing for us,” said Ashleigh Beck, Moore’s best friend, who met her in preschool. “It makes us feel like she didn’t die in vain. We’re getting her name out there and getting the reason why she died out there, and we’re trying our best to do something about it.”

“We did everything together. We were supposed to grow old together, have kids together,” she added. “I was supposed to be in her wedding. She was supposed to be in mine.”

All that changed when Moore, an only child, was killed by a drunk driver four days before Christmas in 2005.

Moore’s parents said the driver was driving without a license, had no insurance and that it was his fourth DUI. He served only six months in jail.

“He took her life and everything that we ever wanted for her ... what every parent wants for their children: to graduate college, to have a nice, beautiful wedding, to have kids. He cheated her out of all of it,” said her mother, Carolyn Moore. “He got a six-month sentence, and she got a life sentence.”

Each of the 822 vehicles that passed through the checkpoint was stopped for 20 seconds or less. Police pulled 32 drivers they suspected were intoxicated into a nearby parking lot for a field sobriety test.

The officer who managed the checkpoint, Lt. Robert Mueck, said the goal of the checkpoint was twofold.

“One is to get drunk drivers or impaired drivers off the road,” he said. “And the other is it’s flashy, it’s big, people see it and they’re calling back to the bars and it’s altering decision making at the bars. That’s good news because it reduces the amount of drunk drivers on the road.”

Donna Beck, Ashleigh’s mother, called the checkpoint a “fabulous healing opportunity for the family.”

Donna Beck is a survivor of a drunk-driving accident herself. A drunk driver hit her car and pushed it into a tree in 1982. She was five months pregnant and on her way to her mother’s funeral. She said she was impaled by the steering wheel, lost the bottom half of her face and had to have it reconstructed.

“For [Amanda’s crash] to happen 23 years after my crash, it just seems like we’ve been victimized horribly twice,” she said.

Michelle Elden, Moore’s roommate for about a year and a half, described Moore as someone who “was always selfless and giving” and “always had a smile on her face.”

“This is wonderful,” Carolyn Moore said of the checkpoint. “Just seeing her picture almost made me go to the floor. It really is nice.”

estelle@umdbk.com

Comments

15 comments
not a friend or relative
Wed Sep 30 2009 22:07
If my daughter was killed by a drunk driver I wouldn't just be cheering, I would be throwing rocks at the idiots who were caught driving drunk,

Maybe locking up DWI drivers for a lot longer time BEFORE they kill someone should be considered.

HOORAY for the parents for letting their daughter's pic be used. Maybe someone who saw it will think twice about the possibility that THEY could have killed her, or someone else's daughter before they drive drunk again., Sometimes making a crime more personal can help people realize that if they hit someone it will be a real person.

Your name
Tue Sep 29 2009 15:34
The problem is that I don't think people are necessarily deterred by the fear of prison sentences. When they step in the car they are certainly not thinking about ANY consequences of their actions, especially not killing someone and going to jail. I think a better way to deal with drunk drivers is to raise awareness (although I certainly think the sentences should still be handed down judiciously!)
KCH
Tue Sep 29 2009 12:25
I lost my brother to drunk driving. He was drunk and he was driving. The only good thing that came out of his crash is he did not kill or hurt anyone else. The check point and the cheering are awsome. In my opinion drunk driving penalties should be much harsher. If you choose to drink and then drive and kill someone you should speend a lot more time in jail. Minimum 10 years.
To all you complaining about the family being there go find a something eles to complain about
Your name
Tue Sep 29 2009 11:50
Dixon-

You probably shouldn't assume that I haven't been through this. We live in America, where opinions -politely given- are welcome. Yours included.

Sandi Angles
Mon Sep 28 2009 23:22
If only u lost someone to a drunk driver maybe u wouldnt think that they shouldnt do this. But drunk drivers should see what could happen. And if i was there with my aunt and uncle yes Amanda was my cousin i would be cheering them on because if they didnt get arrested that night they could have killed somebody on the way. And another thing that guy got 6 months for DUI, no lisense, and no insurance what kind of crap is that. Amanda had her whole life ahead of her. She just graduated from UMBC and she was a firefighter too. And now she is gone. Aunt Carol and Uncle Moe u do what u need to do to help yourself about Amanda. We all love and miss her very much. If u dont like what they did by cheering them on than stop reading it and dont make a comment because your negative comments doesnt help. RIP AMANDA I thought it was a good idea to do this.
A friend of Amanda's
Mon Sep 28 2009 21:19
To all you people who wrote something wrong about these parents are wrong, each person has their own way of dealing with things and let me tell you I would cheer on every single person that got arrested for drinking and driving...why because its against the law and you should not be doing it, they lost the most amazing thing in their life to a drunk driver with his 4th DUI, did you read that right 4th DUI and only 6 months in jail are you kidding me? Its not distasteful at all, I applaud them in everything they do!!!!! I think that was the best thing for them, whatever can help them cope for the loss of their daughter.....
Call a Taxi.
Mon Sep 28 2009 17:53
Well I knew Amanda. And any person who dies or becomes injured due to a person's drunk driving should have their day. Their family and friends have suffered. I am all for it. I never knew that DUI check points could be dedicated to a person who fell victim to someone who was over the limit. The guy that killed Amanda, was WAY over the limit. It was during the day and it was not his first DUI.

So what if her parents were cheering. I mean I have driven drunk, Most of the people reading this have. I have been luck as I have not been in an alcohol related crash or been arrested for DUI. Call former press secretary Mr. Brady. I bet his family cheers whenever someone is arrested for illegally possessing a hand gun.

That family has suffered enough. What ever they need to do to help them heal, so be it. Have you ever laughed at someone being arrested. I have. I know a guy who got a DUI and while being stopped by the police by Hartwick Towers people were on the balcony cheering and laughing as he was given his tests. Don't like it, well don't watch.

Kudos to the Police for stepping up enforcement. And To Amanda's family and friends, Amanda is missed and her memory lives on.

Dixon
Mon Sep 28 2009 15:18
@your name:

I just hope that you're never in a position to make such a judgment based on personal experience.

"I can't imagine ever allowing my deceased daughter's picture to be blown up and placed at the scene of a police checkpoint. There are 100 other, healthier ways that these poor parents could use their daughter's name and story to educate people about the dangers of drunk driving. "

Probably a lot easier to say the above without getting that phone call yourself. Personally I also thought it was really odd to hear they cheered, but I'm not in a position to understand, condemn, or empathize with the family.

anon
Mon Sep 28 2009 14:34
The parents are essentially making that drive to make themselves feel better about themselves and their own personal situation by cheering on arrests. Two wrongs do not make a right.
Your name
Mon Sep 28 2009 14:19
To I agree-

You illustrated my point much better than I did, thank you. I can't imagine ever allowing my deceased daughter's picture to be blown up and placed at the scene of a police checkpoint. There are 100 other, healthier ways that these poor parents could use their daughter's name and story to educate people about the dangers of drunk driving.

I agree
Mon Sep 28 2009 13:47
Your name - I felt the same way when I read this article. I don't think "sponsoring" police checkpoints is a healthy thing for society. Drunk driving is extremely irresponsible and dangerous to others, but this is just encouraging vindictive malice and hate. Cheering and leering is not going to help these people make better decisions in the future; compassion and education will.
Your name
Mon Sep 28 2009 12:18
To My Name-

To each his own, right? (Hint: yes.)

My Name
Mon Sep 28 2009 12:07
Must just be your "Your name." To have lost an only-child to a three-time loser, only to see him serve as little as six months must have been traumatic all on its' own. As long as they didn't get in the face of the drunk driver or call him or her names, I can see how this was cathartic.
bill
Mon Sep 28 2009 10:04
Maybe the police are on to something here. They could charge admission and set up seating at the checkpoints. Kinda like the TV show cops, but live.
Your name
Mon Sep 28 2009 08:57
"Her parents, who drove eight hours from Myrtle Beach, S.C., felt every arrest was a personal victory, cheering as drivers were walked in handcuffs to the police station."

Cheering as drivers were arrested? This doesn't seem like a very healthy, cathartic experience to me. I'm in no way advocating for drunk drivers (because that would be insane) but this whole thing seems a little distasteful. I wonder if I'm the only one who feels this way.

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