Sat, Nov 21, 2009

Tucson Region

Suspect tied to fatal DUI OK'd to drive

But tight limits set on her hours, where she can go go
By Kim Smith
ARIZONA DAILY STAR
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 09.06.2008
A Tucson woman accused of killing a teenager in a drunken-driving accident will be allowed to continue driving despite testing positive for alcohol.
Pima County Superior Court Judge Richard Fields agreed Friday to allow Glenda Rumsey to drive, but with severe restrictions.
Rumsey will be able to drive only between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, and only if she gets an ignition-interlock device installed on her car. She will be able to drive only to work, alcohol-treatment sessions, court, the grocery store and her children's schools.
Ignition-interlock devices disable cars when the driver's breath tests positive for alcohol.
Rumsey is facing manslaughter, aggravated assault and driving under the influence charges in connection with the death of Jose Rincon, 14.
According to authorities, Rincon and his friend, Oscar Perez, were riding their bicycles east on Broadway near Vozack Lane on the East Side around 7:20 p.m. Jan. 12 when Rumsey struck both teens with her car.
Rumsey continued driving but stopped a half-mile later, police said.
Rumsey's blood-alcohol content tested at 0.249 percent. The state's legal limit is 0.08. She also was charged with leaving the scene after causing a fatal crash.
Rumsey posted bail shortly after her arrest, but she was taken into custody last week after a court appearance because she tested positive for alcohol.
She posted $75,000 and was released from jail again Tuesday night.
Friday's hearing was scheduled because Fields was concerned about Rumsey's continuing ability to drive. It had never been brought up as an issue before.
Defense attorney Stephen Barnard told the judge that Rumsey needs to be able to drive, and he has already taken steps to install the ignition-interlock device.
Since her arrest last week, Barnard said, Rumsey has signed up for nine hours of outpatient alcohol treatment a week and is attending Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.
The defense attorney stressed, however, that Rumsey is still presumed innocent.
In response, Fields replied: "I'm not here to punish. I'm here to protect. This is not a sanction."
Deputy Pima County Attorney Mark Diebolt expressed serious reservations about allowing Rumsey to drive, noting there have been cases in which children have blown into the ignition interlock device.
"Nothing's foolproof. A chronic drinker can find a way to deceive and fool the system," Diebolt said.
In addition to the driving restrictions, Fields told Rumsey that she is not allowed to have any alcohol in her home, and she's not allowed to associate with anyone who is drinking or possesses alcohol.
Last week, breath tests administered to Rumsey after court showed she had a blood-alcohol content of 0.012 percent and 0.007 percent.
Although far below the legal driving limit, Rumsey, 42, had been ordered not to drink alcohol and to take Antabuse, a drug that makes people ill if they drink alcohol.
Rumsey will continue to be monitored by a pretrial services case manager. She is scheduled to go to trial Oct. 14.
According to court documents, an engineer hired by Rumsey's attorneys believes the city is responsible for Rincon's death because contractors hired to improve Broadway failed to install 5 feet of pavement. The missing pavement put the bike path the boys were riding on into a merging area, the engineer wrote.
The Rincon and Perez families are suing Rumsey, the city and Chuy's Mesquite Broiler, where Rumsey had been drinking before the crash.
● Contact reporter Kim Smith at 573-4241 or kimsmith@azstarnet.com.