The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Amanda Davis explains license ‘misunderst­anding’

Davis says she failed to reinstate suspended driver’s license.

- By Rodney Ho rho@ajc.com Anchor B2

CBS46’s new anchor says she didn’t realize there’s a process to get driving privileges restored.

Veteran broadcast anchor Amanda Davis, in an exclusive interview Thursday, said her own lack of oversight led to her arrest Tuesday over a suspended driver’s license.

“It was a misunderst­anding on my part,” said Davis, who is joining CBS46 (WGCL-TV) as a new morning anchor starting Jan. 2 after nearly four years off the air.

She was arrested in June 2015 for driving under the influence. As part of a plea deal with Cobb County in November 2015, she was placed on a one-year probation and given a limited driver’s license. After 120 days, she would be allowed to get her driving privileges fully reinstated.

She said she didn’t realize this type of reinstatem­ent is not automatic. She would have to actively go to the Georgia Department of Driver Services office and pay $210 in person or send it in by mail ($200). She didn’t realize that was the case.

So after 12 months, her license status reverted to “suspended.”

That’s what the police officer saw in the Georgia Crime Informatio­n Center database after he pulled her over near Cumberland Mall on Tuesday. He had noticed her expired car tag.

Davis said she thought she was fine with her driver’s license, an old one in her possession with a 2018 expiration date. “I didn’t

think my license was suspended,” she said.

But that was indeed the case. The officer told her, given the law, he had no choice but to arrest her over the suspended license even if it was a misunderst­anding. “The officer did his job,” she said. “He was very nice. I didn’t give him a hard time. I just knew I had to go through the process.”

She was sent to Cobb County Jail and paid $1,320 in bail to get out that evening.

Davis, whose birthday is in October, said she forgot for the first time ever to get her car tag renewed. The cop ultimately gave her a warning since she was still within the grace period.

On Wednesday, the day after her arrest, she paid the $210 at the DDS and received a new driver’s license.

She said after she retired in 2013 from WAGA-TV following a 2012 DUI-related arrest, she was able to relax. “I wasn’t stressed about anything,” she said. “I think I perhaps got too lackadaisi­cal about things. Now that I’m back in a routine, I’ll be more conscienti­ous about things like tags.” She said she has already placed a Siri reminder on her iPhone a month before her 2017 birthday to pay the tag fee early.

Davis admitted she was an alcoholic in a three-part special that aired on CBS46 in May. She said today, she has been sober for 18 months.

“Treatment worked wonders,” she said. “Alcoholism is part of a symptom of a bigger underlying issue. You use alcohol to suppress those feelings about an issue.” In her case, she said it was heartbreak over a breakup with a man she loved that led to depression and excessive drinking.

She said she also used to be a workaholic over her 35 years in the broadcast TV business including 26 at WAGA-TV. “I grew up thinking that you worked, worked, worked until you died,” she said. “Having retired, I realized that wow, there’s more to life than that. I come back with a whole different perspectiv­e.”

After a day of rehearsals Thursday at CBS46 headquarte­rs in Midtown, she said she’s ready for this new chapter. “It’s like getting back on the bicycle,” she said. “And I just have a certain peace now. I don’t think it’s going to be the kind of stress I’m used to working in after so many years in the business.”

 ?? AJC ?? Amanda Davis will be back on air on CBS46 on Jan 2. She said her lack of understand­ing of the law led to her arrest.
AJC Amanda Davis will be back on air on CBS46 on Jan 2. She said her lack of understand­ing of the law led to her arrest.

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