A
nasty knot for state Rep. Tom Taylor, Bill Torpy At Large, 4/18/16, AJC.
How does one begin
to untangle state Rep. Tom Taylor’s DUI arrest? As drunk driving cases go,
this one has so many layers to peel back.
First thing, his
level of intoxication was off the charts. Literally. According to his driver’s
license, Taylor is 185 pounds, which means a man his size drinking 10
beers or 10 1.25-ounce vodkas in an hour (one hour!) would register a .21
percent BAC.
Taylor blew a .225,
a measurement not on the blood-alcohol concentration charts used by some to
calibrate how much drinking they can get away with before risking handcuffs. A
.08 BAC level is the legal limit, or four beers in an hour for a 180-pound man.
(Your body processes a drink per hour, so .08 would be five drinks in two
hours, six in three, etc.) That it was 2:49 on a Thursday afternoon during
spring break indicates this was not an over-social lubrication, not an “I had
some wine with dinner.”
This was the equivalent
of 11 or 12 drinks in an hour or even more over a longer period. With kids.
With an empty water bottle smelling of booze. This is problem drinking.
That he was driving
27 mph over the 45 mph speed limit (72 mph, to save you the math) is not unremarkable.
Being lead-footed is a state tradition. But hightailing like that with four
teen-aged exchange students AND blowing a .225 is downright terrifying.
Oh, yeah, he was
packing, which is his right, of course. He had a Glock 36, a .45-caliber weapon
with substantial stopping power. Add together a 36 and a.225 and what do you
have? The wrong guy on the road to flip off.
Oddly enough,
that’s legal. Really. A lawyer for the gun-rights group Georgia Carry told my
colleague Aaron Gould Sheinin it’s not against state law to get
knee-crawling drunk with a pistol dangling from your side. It’s only a crime
when you go drunk shootin’ — an SUI violation, if you will.
Taylor’s arrest in
Rabun County in North Georgia may have saved a life — his, another motorist’s
or those of the four foreign exchange passengers who will now carry home a
strange, sad tale of life in the U.S.
Taylor and his
wife, who have hosted such students for years, were taking those four youths
and three others (in her vehicle) fishing at Lake Burton, about 10 miles away.
He was following her vehicle, fell behind and goosed the gas to catch up when
he was clocked.
The arrest became
public a week later, prompting Taylor to release a statement: “I profoundly
regret this serious mistake. There’s no one to blame but me, and I greatly
appreciate the professionalism of the officers involved. This was my first
run-in with the law in my life, and it will also be my last.”
There are a lot of
preeners, egotists and even loons in the state legislature. Taylor isn’t
one of them. Taylor is a retired naval officer who was one of the founders of
the city of Dunwoody (incorporated 2008). The Republican legislator is
currently running in next month’s primary for his fourth term and is refusing
to step down.
“He’s going to
run,” said his spokesman, Brian Robinson, a Republican operative called in to
try to save Taylor’s political hide. “He has quite literally devoted his life
to public service and is not going to stop now. He’ll face the same
consequences anyone else will.”
On Friday there was
some postulating that the qualifying period for candidates to run for office
can be reopened (it closed a month ago) if an incumbent steps down.
There was
consternation in Republican circles because Taylor’s primary opponent, Tom
Owens, is a well-known, self-appointed, in-your-face, conspiracy-minded,
immigrant-fearing fringe candidate. To put it mildly.
The prospect of
Rep. Tom Owens (R-Dunwoody) heading to the Legislature has GOP and Dunwoody politicos
guzzling Maalox by the pint. Democrats are in hiding in Dunwoody.
I called Owens and
he was not to be found, perhaps hoping Taylor’s mugshot on the newscasts could
do more for him than anything he might say.
Bob Lundsten, who’s
been around Dunwoody politics for years, said, “I can’t see how Tom can step
down because if he does, Tom Owens wins by default.”
Lundsten corrected
himself, adding he doesn’t want Taylor to continue just to keep Owens out. “I
think Tom Taylor should stay in based on his record,” he said. “This is a very
bad mistake. He should have a chance to pay his penance and continue to serve.
This is a very severe wake-up call.”
I talked with DUI
lawyer Ray Giudice, who said, “If this fellow came to me, I’d say, ‘Start your
community service, go to DUI school, go to AA meetings, maybe three a week.
Admit you’re an alcoholic.’ ”Giudice said the BAC suggests it was either an
all-night drunk or an all-morning drunk. Neither scenario is good.
One thing missing
in Taylor’s statements is an admission of a serious problem and a vow that
he will do something about it. I get
that. There’s terrible shame and he’s a tough, proud guy. But if he
doesn’t own the whole thing, then Tom Owens is waiting to represent you.
Source: AJC 4/18/16
Comments
I am told that the
Georgia GOP can reopen filing for HD 79 if Taylor resigns, because they are
doing this in a couple of other Districts where filers who qualified have
withdrawn.
Norb Leahy,
Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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