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‘Sober DUI’ Arrests 4x Higher Than Previously Reported, Tennessee Bureau Of Investgation Admits

‘Sober DUI’ Arrests 4x Higher Than Previously Reported, Tennessee Bureau Of Investgation Admits

That information also may have never been released if Fox 17 hadn’t launched its own investigation into the issue several years ago, where it found that many of those charged with “sober DUIs” were older and more likely to have issues with field sobriety tests. That investigation also found that “the majority of law enforcement agencies in Middle Tennessee no longer use breathalyzers. So even though many of these people are seen on police body camera video asking for a breathalyzer test, they were denied.” 

At the time, the TBI claimed they preferred blood tests because breathalyzers only test for alcohol, and the results aren’t admissible in court. The fact that it can take months to get the results of those blood tests, however, didn’t appear to be a concern. Ultimately, though, that Fox 17 investigation led to the passage of a new state law that required authorities to provide more information on how many people are charged with sober DUIs and which departments arrested them.

That law also had another important advocate in LaBreesha Batey, a NASA engineer who nearly lost her career when she was arrested for DUI and later convicted, even though she claims to have never consumed alcohol in her life, and the test results didn’t show any drugs or alcohol in her system. In addition to filing a lawsuit, Batey lobbied lawmakers hard, urging them to support the bill that later passed unanimously. 

“It’s still hard to relive that experience,” Batey told Fox 17. “My reputation — they put a mug shot out there on me. That alone is threatening my job and my career.” 

One of the bill’s sponsors, Sen. Raumesh Akbari, also spoke with Fox 17, saying, “I think the list just confirmed that this is a real problem in Tennessee.” She also has questions for law enforcement, asking, “Is this a training issue? Is this a procedural issue? Is it specific to a certain county or a certain law enforcement agency?” Going forward, Akbari plans to work with authorities to craft legislation to cut down on the number of sober DUIs, but figuring out how to do it correctly could take time.

“You don’t want people to experience the nightmare of a false arrest and all the financial, psychological, and emotional issues that go along with it,” she told Fox 17. “And we also don’t want people who are truly intoxicated driving on the roads and potentially injuring themselves or others, or killing others.”

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