Jeff Schroepfer was an hour into the "dog watch," the overnight shift for Minnesota State Patrol troopers, and not a lot had happened yet on the driving-under-the-influence front.
The trooper, however, had a deep reservoir of stories to draw from, and as he came out of the Lowry Hill Tunnel on Saturday night, he recalled a crash there two nights earlier during which a woman ricocheted off a curb, over-corrected and then smashed nearly head-on into the median.
She had a gash above her right knee as big as his fist, he said. But being high on alcohol and Ecstasy, "she wasn't feeling the pain," Schroepfer said.
For law-enforcement officers and impaired drivers, December is DWI crackdown month in Minnesota. The patrol presence will be heavy this weekend, a two-day stretch that historically ranks second only to the St. Patrick's Day party period in DWI arrests, a state public safety spokesman said.
As part of its safe-driving message, the Department of Public Safety staged the delivery of a truckload of officers to a news event earlier this month, and it has churned out statistics showing December being exceeded only by August in the percentage of DWIs issued per month during the past three years.
On Tuesday, the department announced it was teaming with beer and licensed-beverage associations to offer "Designated Driver Gift Cards," which says the giver will be a designated driver on a given date. They can be found at liquor stores, bars and other retailers, or sent electronically at www. minnesotasafeandsober.org.
"Give the gift of a safe lift," the blurb said.
The DWI enforcement campaign is being coordinated by the Department of Public Safety, which uses grant money to pay overtime costs that put extra officers on state roadways.