It is bar closing on a recent Saturday and metro area roads are alive, buzzing with traffic. State trooper Andrew Martinek is eyeing drivers' every move.
Martinek is watching for drunken drivers, and he finds one when a Buick Rendezvous darting in and out of traffic whizzes past him at 83 miles per hour in the Interstate 94 construction zone in downtown Minneapolis. Excessive speed and erratic driving are telltale signs of an intoxicated motorist, Martinek said.
"It's hard to multitask when you are drunk," he said. "That is what you are doing when operating a motor vehicle."
With probable cause established, Martinek pulls the Buick over, and his suspicions are confirmed. There is a strong odor of alcohol and the driver's eyes are glassy. The driver fails three roadside coordination and balance exercises, so Martinek administers a breath test. The driver registers a .095 percent blood-alcohol content, well above the legal driving limit of .08 percent, and is taken to jail.
For Martinek, one of the patrol's most prolific DWI enforcers, it is his 70th DWI arrest of the year.
"I'm passionate about this," said Martinek, who was named a 2017 DWI All-Star Enforcer by the Minnesota Department of Public Safety. "I can prevent somebody from being hurt or killed. Preventing drunken driving crashes is part of protecting the people. We need to get these people off the road."
Over the next two weeks, Martinek and law enforcement representing 300 agencies from across the state will work to do just that in a DWI enforcement campaign running Friday through Labor Day.
Nationally, drunken driving results in roughly 1.1 million arrests and causes 10,000 deaths and $44 billion in economic damage across the country each year. Drunken driving was to blame for nearly a third of motor vehicle fatalities in 2015, according to the latest data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.