Dayton Daily News

Troopers to focus on ‘move over’ law

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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.

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