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Victims of Alcohol-Related
Driving Crashes
Background
According to 1998 statistics from the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), odds are about 3 in 10
that at some point in life a person will be involved in an
alcohol-related driving crash. More than 305,000 people were
injured during 1998 in crashes in which law enforcement officers
reported that alcohol was present. NHTSA estimates that in 1999
approximately 15,786 people died in alcohol-related driving
crashes.
Drunk-driving victimization is generally severe and long
lasting. Research funded by the National Institute of Mental
Health concluded that 5 years after victimization most victims
remain psychologically, physically, and financially impaired.
Twenty percent of victims feel they will never again experience
a normal life.
The law enforcement officer with knowledge about the unique
nature of injury and death in alcohol-related driving crashes
will be forever remembered by victims—or survivors of
victims—as a first responder who knew how to help. And don’t
forget, it could just as easily have been you who was injured or
killed by the drunk driver. Awareness of this fact will give you
patience, humility, and courage.
Tips for Law
Enforcement Officers Responding to Victims of Alcohol-Related
Driving Crashes
- Avoid words and phrases that discount the victim’s
emotional and physical trauma. For example, do not use the
words “At least” and “You’re lucky,” as in, “At
least the drunk driver wasn’t speeding,” or “You’re
lucky to be alive.” Such words will not comfort victims
and may even hurt or anger them. Victims may be in shock or
feeling fear, pain, panic, and confusion. Suggesting to
victims that they are lucky or fortunate is not appropriate
at this time.
- Help the victim driver cope with feelings of guilt and
failure. When a passenger has been injured or killed, the
victim driver often feels guilty for not having avoided the
crash with a last-second decision or maneuver. Gently
encourage victim drivers to approach such feelings with
rational thinking and to try to appreciate that the crash
probably could not have been avoided. Explain to victim
drivers that their last-second actions were only a small
part of a complex sequence of events leading up to the
crash.
- Urge all victims to get immediate medical attention even
when no signs of injury are present. Explain to victims that
alcohol-related crashes are a leading cause of traumatic
brain injury (also called closed head injury) in which the
brain is injured without a skull fracture. Victims with such
an injury may show no immediate symptoms and interact
normally with first responders. Later, however, consequences
of the brain injury may disrupt the victim’s life. As
health problems develop, victims and medical professionals
often do not connect them back to the alcohol-related crash.
Without medical examinations at the time of the crash, these
victims may never realize that their problems stem from the
crash.
- Expect ambivalent and conflicting feelings and statements
from victim passengers in the drunk driver’s vehicle. It
can be difficult for them to blame the drunk driver if he or
she is a friend or family member. In addition, victim
passengers may be reluctant to share information because
they worry about possible criminal justice consequences for
the offending driver.
- Make sure your attitude and choice of words reflect the
reality that drunk driving is a crime, usually a violent
one, and that it has victimized many, many people. Your
actions and words should reflect your knowledge that the
consequences of drunk-driving victimization are as
devastating as those of other violent crimes. Drunk driving
is a crime, not an “accident.” Just as there is no such
thing as a robbery accident or a rape or murder accident,
there are no drunk-driving accidents.
- Be prepared for victims to be emotional or even hostile.
Sometimes, victims strongly believe that law enforcement
does not treat the crime of drunk driving seriously enough,
and they may express their views to you. Remain
nonjudgmental and polite as you accept victims’ reactions
and listen to them state their views. Do not argue or
contradict what victims say. Listening attentively makes
victims feel they have been heard. Show empathy for their
pain and suffering, but do not say “I understand” when
clearly no one can.
- Support family members who want to view and spend time
with the body of their loved one. Survivors often have a
strong psychological need to get to the body of their loved
one as soon as possible and spend time with it. Be sensitive
to the family’s suffering. Knowing that death from an
alcohol related crash almost always causes violent injury to
the body, and knowing the pain such devastating images may
cause surviving family members, your initial reaction may be
to refuse the family access to the body out of a sense of
compassion. However, refusal only increases the survivors’
pain. First, offer to view the body on behalf of the family
and provide a detailed description to them. If family
members still wish to see and be with the body, support
their right to do so. Holding and touching a loved one’s
body gives the survivors the chance to say goodbye while the
victim’s body is still in its natural state, before
funeral home preparation. Viewing the body can help
survivors begin the process of accepting the death.
- Choose your words with care and sensitivity. For many
survivors, the distinction between “died” and
“killed” takes on important significance after a
drunk-driving crash fatality. The word “died” ignores
the victimization. The word “killed” signifies the
deliberate or reckless taking of life.
- Look for and place in safekeeping any personal articles of
the victims, such as clothing and jewelry, found at the
crash scene. In a survey on satisfaction with the criminal
justice system’s response to drunk-driving crashes, nearly
two-thirds of the respondents were satisfied with law
enforcement’s investigation of cases, but many felt that
officers had failed to protect the victims’ personal
property. This perception was a source of hurt and
bitterness.
- Review the
Survivors of Homicide Victims section for additional
tips on responding to the needs of survivors of victims
killed in alcohol-related driving crashes.
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| First Response to
Victims of Crime 2001 |
December 2001
|
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This document was last updated on January 24, 2002
This
article has been reproduced from the website of the U.S.
Department of Justice
regarding 'First
Response to Victims of Crime -- A Handbook for Law Enforcement Officers
on How To Approach and Help,'
and the copyright is theirs.
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