Calgary Herald

Tweets aid drunk drivers

Police say tips on checkstops make roads more dangerous —

- ERIKA STARK

Tonight I passed through a @CalgaryPol­ice #Checkstop. I’m not telling where. If you’re stupid enough to drink & drive, you SHOULD be caught TWEETED @ XTINAPIERC­E ON CHRISTMAS EVE

As they prepare for one of the busiest party nights of the year, Calgary Police are cautioning that those who tweet the location of checkstops could be putting lives at risk by helping impaired drivers circumvent the law.

Police say they will be out in “full force” on New Year’s Eve looking to crack down on impaired drivers, and while tweeting checkstop locations isn’t illegal, it’s not making the roads any safer.

“If you are facilitati­ng or helping that impaired driver go around the checkstop, you have no idea what community that person is now going to drive through,” said traffic unit Insp. Michael Watterston. “By you giving the location, they’re going to avoid detection and apprehensi­on, and we all know full well that impaired drivers don’t pick and choose who their victims are going to be.”

Last year in Alberta, 78 people died in alcoholrel­ated collisions and 1,268 were injured, according to Alberta Transporta­tion. Tweeting checkstop locations isn’t exclusive to Calgary. Both Ottawa and Edmonton police have expressed similar frustratio­n with the practice.

In Calgary, there’s one account entirely dedicated to listing and retweeting the locations. That account’s descriptio­n says it’s meant for the “0.049ers,” or those who are just barely under the legal blood-alcohol limit of 0.05. “If you’re so concerned about where a checkstop is that you’re looking online to see where it is, it’s probably a good sign that you probably shouldn’t be driving,” said digital communicat­ions officer Cst. Jared Euverman. “I don’t buy into the whole (idea) that it’s for people who want to avoid traffic on the way home.”

Euverman added that the informatio­n on Twitter is likely to be inaccurate, given that police are constantly changing the locations of their checkstops.

Like the police, many Twitter users are against tweeting checkstop locations.

“Tonight I passed through a @CalgaryPol­ice #Checkstop. I’m not telling where. If you’re stupid enough to drink & drive, you SHOULD be caught,” tweeted @xtinapierc­e on Christmas Eve.

Another user, @Sean_in_ Calgary, suggested tweeting fake checkstops to send impaired drivers “right into the real ones.”

Instead of tweeting checkstop locations, Watterston said he’d like to see social media used to encourage people to get home safe.

“I would like to see the social media folks that are putting that informatio­n out there saying, ‘watch out, there’s a checkstop out there, don’t drink and drive,’ as opposed to ‘watch out, don’t drive down Crowchild Trail because police are there,’” he said.

“We want that impaired driver not to be on the roadway,” Watterston added.

He urged Calgarians to use taxis, transit or designated drivers on New Year’s Eve.

 ?? Stuart Gradon/calgary Herald ?? Const. Todd Bell, of the Calgary Police Service, at a police checkstop. Police are urging people not to help drunk drivers circumvent the law by tweeting checkstop sites.
Stuart Gradon/calgary Herald Const. Todd Bell, of the Calgary Police Service, at a police checkstop. Police are urging people not to help drunk drivers circumvent the law by tweeting checkstop sites.

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