Ethics Cases

 

Case # 17
Drunk Driving
Category:
Legal ethics

Case:
In New Jersey a person convicted of his first drunk driving offense faces a mandatory suspension of his license for six months, and the possibility of a thirty-day jail sentence. In addition, the offender must pay a mandatory fine of $250 and a $100 fee to support law enforcement efforts to catch other drunk drivers. Convicted drunk drivers are also required to undergo a minimum of 12 hours counseling for which they must pay a $1,000 surcharge for each of three years, as well as $50 a day. In addition, drunk drivers receive 9 “insurance points” that could subject them to huge increases in their insurance premiums. The total cost for a first offense of drunk driving in New Jersey probably exceeds $9,000.

Is the New Jersey penalty for drunk driving fair or unfair? Explain your answer.

Notes:
Fourth Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl, APPE, 2/26/98

Author Information:
Author's Name Robert F. Ladenson
Author E-mail ladenson@iit.edu
Author's homepage http://www.iit.edu/departments/humanities/
Author's Institution Department of Philosophy Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT), and Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT), and Faculty Associate, Center for the Study of Ethics in the Professions (IIT)
Institution Web site http://ethics.iit.edu/
Copyright 1998