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DWI
Sources on DWI

72 Hours of Drunken Driving

DWI Brakes Failing

Cost of DWI

Whom Should Police Target?

Many Drunks Get Off Easy

Liquor Sellers Not Held Accountable

Not All Licenses Yanked

The Hard Truth

Stopping Those Who Start Young

To Our Readers

Life Sentences: KEVIN MARTINEZ, 17, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: CHERYL RODGERS, 16, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: DENNIS LIHTE, 51, Police chaplain

Life Sentences: Tony Miers, 38, Former Drunken Driver

Life Sentences: PHIL GRIEGO, 53, Convicted Twice of DWI

Life Sentences: MICHELLE JIMENEZ, 34, Belen, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: ANGELA PORTILLO, 21, Killed in Crash

Life Sentences: Sonja Britton, DWI Activist

Life Sentences: SANDRA SUAZO, 26, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: BILLY POWELL, 67, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: MARY MARGARET SOSA, 26, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: Douglas Binder, 44, Trauma Center Doctor

Life Sentences: MIGUEL MARTINEZ, 79, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: ANGELA PORTILLO, 21, Killed in Crash

Life Sentences: Ronny Frazee, 31, Former drunken driver

Life Sentences: TIMOTHY GLASS, 50, DWI accident victim

Life Sentences: RUSSELL KIDMAN, 57; MARY KIDMAN, 55, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: BREANN WILSON, 19, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: RAY HOBB, 36, CHRISTINE HOBB, 33 SAFAWNTYRA HOBB, 8 months, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: KEVIN MARTINEZ, 17, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: CHERYL RODGERS, 16, Killed by a drunken driver

Life Sentences: DENNIS LIHTE, 51, Police chaplain

Lives Lost to DWI 1999-2001

COMMENTARY: Solutions Demand Involvement


More DWI


          Front Page  DWI


Sunday, May 5, 2002

Life Sentences: Ronny Frazee, 31, Former drunken driver

By Leslie Linthicum
Journal Staff Writer
   
Moriarty    
    Ronny Frazee never thought much about the sequence of events that landed him in court four times in a little more than 10 years.
    "You go to the bar, have a few beers and you go home," Frazee says. "And you drive."
    Arrested for DWI for the first time in Truth or Consequences when he was 19 and again in Albuquerque when he was 24, Frazee went to court, paid his fines, accepted the court's counseling and got right back on the road.
    "I'd go talk to my counselor," he says, "stop and get me a quart and drink it on the way home."
    Then Frazee, a dropout from Rio Grande High School, turned 30 and realized he had a good job that he liked and a girlfriend committed to staying with him despite his drinking binges.
    Back-to-back DWI arrests in Albuquerque and Moriarty last year got Frazee's attention. He did 90 days in the Torrance County Detention Center and was enrolled in a Metropolitan Court program in Albuquerque that combined acupuncture, regular urine and blood screenings, counseling and community service.
    More than a year later, Frazee says he no longer drinks or drives. The court has taken his driver's license away, and Frazee knows he can never touch alcohol again if he is going to keep his record clean.
    "I love to shoot pool but I can't," he says. "If I go into a bar and shoot pool, I'll drink a beer. And if I drink a beer, eventually I'll drive. So I just can't."
    Frazee, a carpenter, has also evolved into an advocate for tougher DWI laws.
    "If it was up to me, you'd do five to 10 years in prison for the first one," Frazee says. "There's a lot of people getting hurt and dying, and it's got to stop."
    "Everybody else had a problem, but I didn't."