Sens. Raptakis, Tikoian and Rep. Serpa call for passage of drunken driving legislation

 

            STATE HOUSE – Sens. Leonidas P. Raptakis and David P. Tikoian and Rep. Patricia A. Serpa are calling for the passage of several bills that strengthen the penalties for drunken, impaired and reckless driving offenses. Senators Raptakis and Tikoian and Representative Serpa note the increase in drunken driving arrests over the past several months, including nine arrests by the State Police over the holiday weekend, with many also causing serious injury and death.

            “Just over this past week, there was a drunken wrong-way driver on the highway and several other notable and serious crashes involving drunken drivers, including a fatality in Woonsocket. Enough is enough. These bills need to be passed in order to protect our residents on the road. We are urging our colleagues to support these bills so that the governor can sign them into law and we can hold these selfish and dangerous drunken drivers accountable before they get behind the wheel and cause serious damage to our friends and loved ones,” said Senator Raptakis (D-Dist. 33, Coventry, West Greenwich), Senator Tikoian (D-Dist. 22, Smithfield, North Providence, Lincoln) and Representative Serpa (D-Dist. 27, West Warwick, Coventry).           

            The legislators are calling for the passage of legislation (2024-H 7630, 2024-S 2024), sponsored by Representative Serpa and Senator Tikoian that would provide for a single, increased range of penalties for all driving offenses that result in serious bodily injury or death. They are also calling for the passage of legislation (2024-H 7631, 2024-S 2023) sponsored by Representative Serpa and Senator Raptakis that would extend the “lookback” period for repeat offenses involving driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs and for repeat offenses related to failure or refusal to submit to chemical tests under from five to 10 years.

 

Columbia University is giving anti-Israel student protestors a deadline to break up their encampment or risk suspension through next school year. President Minouche [[ me-knew ]] Shafik [[ shaw-feek ]] says administrators and student organizers have had constructive conversations since last week but rejected their demands to divest from Israel. Students have until 2 p.m. New York time to break up their encampment.        At least five people are dead after tornadoes tore through four states over the weekend. A four-month-old baby was one of four people killed in Oklahoma. Another person lost their life in Iowa due to storm-related injuries. The fatal tornadoes over the weekend led to massive destruction in some towns, including Sulphur, Oklahoma, and Minden, Iowa.        Speaker Mike Johnson continues to face threats for his removal from some conservatives in his party. Georgia Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene on Sunday said Johnson's days as speaker are "numbered" after he backed additional military aid for Ukraine. Greene last month filed a motion to remove Johnson, but it's not clear if or when she'll call the motion to a vote on the House floor. Two Republicans have already backed the effort, but Democrats have signaled they would vote to save Johnson's job.        The first trial in a pandemic relief funds fraud case is set to start today in Minneapolis. Seven defendants are charged with wire fraud and money laundering. They all had ties to a Minnesota business that enrolled in federal meal programs to feed needy children in April 2020. The defendants are accused of receiving more than 40 million dollars in federal reimbursements for claiming to serve over 18 million meals to children across Minnesota.        A truck driver who says he was fired over a CBD elixir will have his case heard before the Supreme Court. Douglas Horn, who worked as a trucker for 14 years, tried a product called "Dixie X" that was advertised to contain no THC in 2012. He failed his drug test weeks later. Horn filed the lawsuit in the Western District of New York in 2015, alleging the companies involved in making and distributing Dixie X violated the Controlled Substances Act.        "Challengers" tops the box office on its opening weekend. The R-rated drama about a love triangle in the world of competitive tennis earned an estimated 15-million-dollars. "Unsung Hero," a drama about the Christian rock group For King & Country, was second with an estimated seven-point-seven-million-dollars. "Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire" remains in the top five, placing third with seven-point-two million-dollars.