UNC Professor Challenging DUI Stop by Firefighter
Argues use of sirens gave color of law to a citizen arrest and amounted to an illegal search and seizure
When a North Carolina firefighter switched on the siren atop his Chapel Hill Fire Department truck to get a driver he suspected of being impaired to pull over, he probably didn't expect to ignite a constitutional debate.
But that's exactly what has happened. The woman Fire Lt. Gordon Shatley pulled over on his way back from a call was Dorothy Hoogland Verkerk, a professor at the University of North Carolina and former town council member who is arguing use of the fire truck and siren - which are not authorized for law enforcement actions - gave the color of government to what might otherwise have been a lawful citizen's arrest. And although a lower court upheld Verkerk's arrest, an appellate court remanded the case with instructions to consider whether it was an illegal search and seizure.
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Dorothy Hoogland Verkerk, a professor at the University of North Carolina and former town council member is a convicted drunk and an environmental activist.
There's no such thing as a convicted drunk other than those found on pews.
There is nothing illegal about being drunk. It's the when and where; public intoxication or DUI.
Was Shatley charged for impersonating an officer of the court?