Troopers to focus on ‘move over’ law
The State Highway Patrol in Ohio and other members of the 6-State Trooper Proj- ect will be collaborating on education and enforcement of the “move over law.”
The patrol says the high-visibility enforcement begins Sunday at 12:01 a.m. and ends July 27, at 11:59 p.m. It will include Ohio troopers and state police from Kentucky, Indiana, Pennsylvania, Michigan and West Virginia.
Ohio law requires drivers to move over to an adjacent lane when approaching vehicles with flashing or rotating lights parked on the roadside. Motorists should slow down and proceed cautiously, if they can’t move over due to traffic, weather conditions, or lack of a second lane.
All fifty states have a Move Over law.
The trooper partnership provides law enforcement and security services involv- ing highway safety, criminal patrol and intelligence sharing. arrest of three black students involved in a shoplifting incident.
The Elyria Chronicle-Tele- gram reports the fees will be split among a number of attorneys in a decision Wednesday by Judge John Miraldi.
A jury last month awarded David Gibson, family patriarch Allyn Gibson, and Gibson’s Bakery $44 million in compensatory and punitive damages, which Miraldi cut nearly in half.
An Oberlin College spokes- man declined to comment.
The students were charged with assaulting David Gib- son’s son, also nam ed Allyn, after he caught one of them shoplifting wine. They pleaded guilty to misdemeanors.