Police set up
mobile DUI checkpoints around New Jersey every weekend with the goal to
pull impaired drivers off the road before they hurt themselves and others. A new
program will go into place in Holmdel with a very special message to
drivers.
Jack Misdom died a month shy of his 17th birthday
in February 1992 because of a drunk driver.
“My brother was
walking to a friend's house on Route 36 and struck and killed,”
says Alex Misdom, Jack's brother. “He was sentenced to 10 years and unfortunately only
served one."
Jack Misdom's photos now cover the signs that will
be displayed at the Holmdel Township police checkpoints this weekend. Alex
Misdom wanted drivers to see firsthand the pain the wrong decision
can inflict on innocent victims.
“You don't want someone to put through this, you
don't want to live through this,” says Alex. “It's just very simple - just
plan ahead if you're going to drink or do whatever.”
The hope is for signs like these is to
become a sort of flagship program, adding other faces of those
killed by drunk drivers across the state.
“I want this to be almost as a role model
example for other agencies to use to pick a local victim, obviously with their
permission, to remember their loved one, their family member and to get
the message out there to obviously not drink and drive,” says Officer Matthew
Menosky.
Menosky, Mothers Against Drunk Driving and the New Jersey Division of
Highway Traffic Safety came up with the idea.
“That's all they really see are the headlines,”
says Menosky. “They don't know the carnage that actually happens at the scene
or to these families. It actually rips their lives apart."
Statistics provided by the state police show
fatal crashes in New Jersey continued to rise from 2019 through the
pandemic and into this year. In 2021, 699 drivers, passengers, cyclists and
pedestrians were killed due to collisions on New Jersey roads.