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South Suburban DUI Arrests, July 1

That's not water in that water bottle, drunken driver crashes car into light pole and more in this week's roundup of drunken driving arrests in the Southland.

 

 

ORLAND PARK

June 15: Police pulled over a car after seeing it drive through a red light and cross over the center line on Wolf Road south of 159th Street around 1:30 p.m. The driver’s breath smelled like alcohol and she failed field sobriety tests, police said. At first she wouldn’t provide a breath sample, but later she did at the police station, according to the report. Liza Callahan, 50, of the 11800 block of 86th Avenue in Palos Park, was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, driving under the influence with a blood-alcohol level greater than .08, improper lane use, disobeying a traffic control light and driving an uninsured vehicle.

June 9: 
Police pulled over a car for swerving outside of the lane line on 159th Street near Park Station Boulevard, around 3 a.m. The driver’s breath smelled like alcohol, and he failed field sobriety tests, police said. Jason C. Jancik, 23, of the 14300 block of Surrey Court in Homer Glen, was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, driving under the influence with a blood-alcohol level greater than .08 and improper lane use.

June 9: 
Police pulled over a car for driving into the right lane while making a left turn in the 8300 block of 159thStreet around 12:55 a.m. The driver’s breath smelled like alcohol, but he refused to take field sobriety tests or use a Breathalyzer, police said. Ricardo A. Perez, 26, of the 10600 block of Avenue G in Chicago, was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol and improper turning.

June 8: 
Police pulled over a car after seeing it driving 59 mph in a 45 mph zone in the 9700 block of 159th Street around 3:15 a.m. The driver’s breath smelled like alcohol and she failed field sobriety tests, police said. A marijuana pipe was found in the car that belonged to a passenger, according to the report. Madelyn R. Bertrand, 19, of the 9900 block of Spaulding Avenue in Evergreen Park, was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, driving under the influence with a blood-alcohol level greater than .08, speeding and driving an uninsured vehicle. Kathryn E. Cullen, 19, of the 3900 block of 104th Place in Chicago, was cited with possession of drug paraphernalia. Both we cited for underage consumption of alcohol.

June 7:
 Police were called about a white Lexus SUV swerving and hitting curbs near 143rd Street and Ravinia Avenue around 10:15 p.m. An officer saw an SUV matching the description crossing over lane lines, and nearly hitting an oncoming car, while in the 11000 block of 143rd Street, and the SUV was pulled over, police said. The SUV kept driving after the officer turned on emergency lights, according to the report. The driver failed field sobriety tests, her breath smelled faintly like alcohol and she admitted to drinking earlier in the night, police said. She declined to take a Breathalyzer test, and police later found a cup in the SUV with alcohol in it, according to the report. Christine E. Steadman, 48, of the 1000 block of Edgewood Court in Lemont, was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, driving an uninsured vehicle, improper lane use and illegal transportation of alcohol.

CHICAGO HEIGHTS 

June 18: Thomas J. Dobrzeniecki, 29, of the 21700 block of Orion Avenue in Sauk Village, was arrested and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol after police stopped him upon seeing him drive eastbound in a westbound lane on Joe Orr Road, according to the report. Police saw a water bottle containing an alcoholic beverage in Dobrzeniecki's center console and smelled alcohol on his breath, according to the report. Asked if he had been drinking, Dobrzeniecki told police "I've had a few beers." After performing field sobriety tests, Dobrzeniecki was taken into custody. He was also charged with disobeying a police officer, improper lane usage, driving without valid insurance, illegal transportation of open alcohol and blood-alcohol content above .08, according to the report.

June 16: Darris L. Browner, 28, of the 1000 block of East 100th Place, was arrested and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol after police stopped him near the intersection of 14th Street and Aberdeen Street just after 1:30 a.m., according to the report.

June 16:
Adam Alcantar, 31, of the 1300 block of Emerald Avenue, was arrested and charged with driving under the influence after police stopped him for speeding and failing to stop at a stop sign, according to the report. Upon smelling alcohol on Alcantar's breath and seeing an open can of beer in his center console, police had him perform field sobriety tests, according to the report. Alcantar was hit with additional charges of disobeying a stop sign, lack of insurance, transporting open alcohol and having a blood-alcohol content level above .08, according to the report.

June 16:
David Peavy, 55, of the 1400 block of Kinross Street in Flossmoor, was arrested and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol after police stopped him upon seeing him drop off three passengers in the 1500 block Shields Avenue, an area "known for high narcotic sales and arrests," according to the report. Peavy got out of his truck and spoke with police in the street, according to the report. Asked if he had been drinking, Peavy told police he had not, but struggled to perform some field sobriety tests while refusing to do the rest.

HOMEWOOD

June 20: Efrain Orduna, 40, 16794 Hillside Place in Tinley Park, was charged with DUI and transportation of open alcohol after he was stopped in the 1700 block of 183rd Street at 1:03 a.m., police said. Orduna drove very slowly, swerved and used his turning signal “on and off,” in the area of 175th Street and Dixie Highway, according to the police report. Police said the red Jeep he drove hit a curb as he drove east on 183rd Street. He was also charged with improper lane usage, failure to wear a seatbelt and driving with an expired driver’s license.

NEW LENOX

June 23: Joshua Kanuch, 28, of Chicago, was charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, driving with a suspended license and driving without insurance, after he crashed his car into a light pole at Laraway Road and Cardinal Drive in New Lenox.

PALOS HEIGHTS

June 17: Jose Lopez, 37, of the 3100 block of Ainsline in Chicago, was charged with drunken driving, driving without insurance and driving without a valid driver's license. He was stopped on College Drive at 11:29 p.m. for swerving between lanes, police said. A breath test revealed a blood alcohol level of .222, police said.

June 16:
Tomasz Budz, 34, of the 7300 block of 114th Street in Worth, was charged with driving under the influence. He was stopped at 9:45 p.m. for improper lane use, police said. He failed field sobriety tests, police said.


Police report information is provided by local police departments. Charges are not evidence of guilt. They are a record of police actions on a given day, and persons charged with a crime are presumed innocent until proven guilty in court. If you or a family member are charged or cited and the case is subsequently adjudicated, we encourage you to notify the editor. We will verify and report the outcome.

Related Topics: Drunken Driving, Dui, Police Blotter, and South Suburban DUI Arrests

Ranger

8:06 am on Sunday, July 1, 2012

Its amazing how many people are driving with no licenses or insurance! Maybe 5 years in jail would work instead of a fine and a slap on the wrist!

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sells

9:17 am on Sunday, July 1, 2012

Tom, couldn't agree more. They get a fine and it's still cheaper than buying insurance. And our premiums pay for uninsured motorists.

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Sara Waters

11:11 am on Monday, July 2, 2012

Ranger - then in 5 years they get released from prison, Get in a car and drive anyways. Yes in a perfect world idiots wouldn't do illegal things, but they do. It's not going to stop them. It might deter a few, but most it's unlikely. People feel driving a car is a right not the privilege it is

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Sara Waters

11:13 am on Monday, July 2, 2012

I agree with Sells - in all my adult life 20 years now, I've never had a claim yet I've shelled out thousands in premiums. I think the good drivers should get rebates from the insurance carrier. Say if after 5 years you have no tickets or claims, give us $500 back. I'd be more likely to stay with a company. Now every couple of years I shop around. Just switched about 8 months ago, saved $90 a month on premiums, able to raise coverage and lower deductible too.

babyboomer

8:10 am on Sunday, July 1, 2012

Its really scary to think how many people are driving around drunk, on drugs & texting.

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Chevy

10:16 am on Sunday, July 1, 2012

That's why I drive a Canyonero- Largest SUV on the road.

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Chevy

10:16 am on Sunday, July 1, 2012

That's why I drive a Canyonero- Largest SUV on the road.

http://simpsons.wikia.com/wiki/Canyonero

Adam

5:14 pm on Sunday, July 1, 2012

If you ask any other department about the one in new lenox they will tell you their a joke. They have harrassed me and threatened me and my family. To be specific the worst is officer lindeman who has dealt me physical abuse for saying I want to call my parents when I was a minor. I showed no signs of resisting and he dragged me, whipped onto the back of my car and threatened to tazor me about 5 times for simple things such as talking. And my friends were just sitting in my car in absolute shock. I wish something can be done about it for what ive went through dealing with the new lenox police, but im 18 and no adult would help me do anything and ive tried to go to the station and to complain but I found no help or belief their. I have absolute no reason to lie or exhaderate. Their are some men in that station that dont deserve to call themselves police officers.

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Daytona Beach

8:47 am on Monday, July 2, 2012

GET A LAWYER. A GOOD LAWYER KNOWS THE LAW. A REAL GOOD LAWYER KNOWS THE JUDGE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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lala

9:07 am on Monday, July 2, 2012

You say no adults will help you. What about your parents? If this is true, they should have been standing up for you when you were a minor. Most squad cars these days have cameras that record everything. Cameras don't lie.

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Harold Busch

9:31 am on Monday, July 2, 2012

I wish something could be done about your ability to spell.

Dave W.

11:20 pm on Sunday, July 1, 2012

Why is it the law, but the law is essentially winked at? How about caught with no license (because you never had one, or can't get one?)? Why do drunk drivers get more than one chance, with that first one meaning you immediately go on the puff and start thing?
The reason they forced us to buy insurance was because driving a priviledge...than act like it...stop worrying about my seat belt, or doing 34 in a thirty, even. Get the people that are hurting others. Come down hard on them. Leave the good minded people alone.

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Sara Waters

11:16 am on Monday, July 2, 2012

Dave W - seat belts save lives.

welcome home

8:59 am on Monday, July 2, 2012

Dave W: "Why is it the law, but the law is essentially winked at?" That's up to a Judge to decide. "Why do drunk drivers get more than one chance, with that first one meaning you immediately go on the puff and start thing?" Again, it's based on law. And people make mistakes. Some are innocent while others are not." Why shouldn't police worry about seatbelts? Beacuse children drive in cars and need to be restrained. Many are not and beleive it or not all of our premiums go up each time people make claims on large accidents and medical bills due to people flying out of windshields. You must not know any police officers on a personal level. If you did you'd have a much different realistic perspective. Beleive me, police officers WANT to get the people that are hurting others. How would they be able to know who the good minded people are during a routine traffic stop? I imagine you think you're a good-minded person and youv'e gotten slaps on the wrist for minor speeding or a seat belt violation. get over it Dave.

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SouthSide

12:06 pm on Monday, July 2, 2012

I'd like to see more people pulled over for not having their children in the back seat in a child safety seat. Be an a$$ and don't wear a seat belt if you like, but don't play Russian Roulette with your children!

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hazelgreen

1:39 pm on Monday, July 2, 2012

Unfortunately, I know of many many people that let their children sit in the front seat of a car when they are clearly not old enough. I constantly hear from my son, "but so and so sits in the front seat". Sorry kid, but too bad.

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