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Will County DUI Arrests: Feb. 16

A look at recent driving under the influence arrests in Will County.

 

Joliet

Feb. 13 Quiwana D. Bills, 37, 1203 Highland, Joliet, arrested by the Will County Sheriff's Office and booked into the Will County jail on Feb. 13 on charges of driving under the influence of drugs, no license and disregarding a stop sign.

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Feb. 9 Diane M. Miller, 53, 242 Haller, Romeoville, arrested by the Joliet Police Department and booked into the Will County jail on Feb. 9 on charges of driving under the influence of alcohol, driving an uninsured motor vehicle, disobeying a police officer's order, improper traffic lane usage, going the wrong way on a one-way street and electronic communication device.

Feb. 9 Vincente E. Chandler, 22, 667 Fourth Ave., Joliet, arrested by the Crest Hill Police Department and booked into the Will County jail on Feb. 9 on charges of drivng under the influence of alcohol and improper lane usage.

Feb. 9 Audon Gonzalez, 37, 927 Kelly, Joliet, arrested by the Will County Sheriff's Office and booked into the Will County jail on Feb. 9 on charges of driving under the influence of alcohol, blood alcohol content over .08 and failure to reduce speed.

Feb. 7 Angel Guzman, 26, 567 E. Benton, Joliet, arrested by the Joliet Police Department and booked into the Will County jail on Feb. 7 on charges of driving under the influence of alcohol, blood alcohol content over .08 and operating an uninsured motor vehicle.

Romeoville

Feb. 10 Jesus M. Sanchez, 36, 501 Pasadena, Crest Hill, arrested by the Romeoville Police Department and booked into the Will County jail on Feb. 10 on charges of aggravated driving under the influence, possession of a controlled substance, unlicensed driver, operating an uninsured motor vehicle and failure to wear a seat belt.

Plainfield

Feb. 12 Paul Lungren, 44, of the 7700 block of Douglas Court, Frankfort, was arrested by Plainfield police at 11:44 p.m. at Joliet Road and Route 59 and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, failure to signal and failure to yield at a stop sign, according to police.

Feb. 9 Audon Gonzalez, 37, of the 900 block of Kelly Avenue, Joliet, was arrested by Will County Sheriff's police at 127th and New Avenue and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol and failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, according to police.

Feb. 9 Daniel J. Hyzny, 21, of the 13000 block of Meadow Lane, Plainfield, was arrested by Will County Sheriff's police and booked into the Will County Jail on charges of driving under the influence of alcohol and improper lane use, according to police.

Feb. 6 Henry Bartsch, 58, of the 1500 block of Somerfield Drive, Bolingbrook, was arrested by Plainfield police at 11:17 p.m. at 135th Street and Naperville Road and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, police said.

Feb. 4  Sandie Dresden, 30, of the 15000 block of Route 59 in Plainfield was arrested by Will County Sheriff's police in the 2200 block of Route 59 and charged with driving under the influence of alcohol, failure to signal and possession of a controlled substance, police said.

Bolingbrook

Feb. 3 Sammy Gibson, 47, 275 Old Elm Dr., was arrested at 2:50 a.m. and charged with improper lane usage and DUI following a traffic stop on the 400 block of W. Boughton Road, police said. 

Feb. 3 Arnold White, 23, 16W564 Honeysuckle Rose Ln., Willowbrook, was arrested at 4:48 a.m. and charged with DUI, improper lane usage, speeding and no valid registration following a traffic stop on the 400 block of N. Bolingbrook Drive, police said. 

Feb. 2 Eric Liebing, 33, 520 Glendale Ave., Glen Ellyn, was arrested at 1:55 p.m. and charged with DUI, improper lane usage, no valid driver’s license and no insurance following a traffic stop on the 100 block of N. Weber Road, police said. 

Police report information is provided by local police departments. Charges are not evidence of guilt. They are a record of police actions on a given day, and persons charged with a crime are presumed innocent until proven guilty in court. If you or a family member are charged or cited and the case is subsequently adjudicated, we encourage you to notify the editor. We will verify and report the outcome.

Related Topics: Wil County DUI Arrests

anonymous

11:00 am on Sunday, February 17, 2013

good to see the cops are meeting their quotas-hope they're doing so with their speeding ticket quotas. you see-we're no longer private citizens with the right to be left alone -we're cash cows with $ sign bulls eyes to be bled dry to our broke-a**ed govt masters

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Frank Stein

9:17 pm on Sunday, February 17, 2013

Oh yea "anonymous"(lol). Everyone's out to get you. Are the black helicopters covertly circling your house? Is the govt taping your phone again ? Paranoia the destroya. You're a regular "rebel without a clue" I think the govt has better things to do then follow some jobless loon

Jax

11:08 am on Sunday, February 17, 2013

I find it extremely funny that cops even write tickets for speeding or talking in a cell phone or running a red light or stop sign. Because they are the biggest law breakers out there. I mean no one holds them accountable so why not they have a badge that says they can do what they want just like the Nazis did

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Muha

2:21 pm on Sunday, February 17, 2013

Anonymous, I sure hope we never hear from you on this site if you or your family ever gets hit by a drunk driver. I can't believe you are critizing the police for doing their job by protecting us. No one is perfect. I bet you have NEVER gone above the speed limit. Good for you.

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Lisa Wilson

3:37 pm on Sunday, February 17, 2013

I have to agree with Muha, I am a victim of a drunk driver, i lost both my legs, and my right eye because of a drunken driver. Thank God Orland Park Police Officers were there to rescue me out of a already totaled and burning car. They got hurt in the process while trying to get me out of the car.
And Oh by the way: The Drunk Driver only got a warning and I was there to see his 90 days of community service sentence. Dont blame the police department, blame the judges. after all they are the ones with the power.

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Muha

5:13 pm on Sunday, February 17, 2013

God love you, Lisa. I will make you a part of my daily rosary.

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John Roberts

8:47 pm on Sunday, February 17, 2013

do the laws stop people from DUI? Nope.. Does the money go back to the community? nope ..Do people die from trying to out run the cops because of fear of going to jail? yep..The laws do not do anything..murder,rape,theft have all been illegal for years and some carried a punishment of death and still happened..This is just like drugs this will never end. laws have a reverse effect also..just look at the nice one just created the No electronics in the garbage..every where you go now down just about every alley way and road side there are TV's and electronics...Now what is the city going to do? make it a harsher punishment to do this..not set up things like donation boxes..but set it up to where your money will be taken and the electronics will still be dumped..lol..People just need to be aware there are drunk drivers out there..and yes I lost my mother from a drunk driver...Running from the cops at 110mph on his crotch rocket so drunk driving has effected me also...but I still do not think sending people to prison is working..and community service..if you knpw the right people then your all good ya wont be doing much of it..this is a catch 22 but prohibition was way way worse...

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GlockG22Shoots40s

11:00 am on Monday, February 18, 2013

I don't have an answer for the problem, but I also don't believe we should just let mayhem ensue and do away with all laws. The way the enforce them may need some fine tuning.
The way to stop rape, murder, and theft, (or at least limit or slow the activity) is concealed/open carry without need of a permit. People's vision of the old wild west are quite far fetched. Vermont and Arizona have such a problem with allowing their citizens to carry don't they?
Bottom line, many of the laws are simply cash cows for municipalities, counties, and states.

Bill

11:36 am on Tuesday, February 19, 2013

The solution, effecient public transport like our European cousins!

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