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Massachusetts police officer arrested after allegedly crashing an unmarked police cruiser while driving drunk
Image source: WBZ-TV screenshot

Massachusetts police officer arrested after allegedly crashing an unmarked police cruiser while driving drunk

A detective from Everett, Massachusetts is in hot water after she allegedly crashed a take-home police vehicle while driving under the influence on Monday night.

According to WBZ-TV, detective Sarah Nawoichik was allegedly driving home after a party Monday night when she crashed an unmarked police cruiser into a parked SUV on Union Street in Everett. The force of the collision drove the SUV into a third car, which in turn was pushed onto the sidewalk and also damaged. Thankfully, although Nawoichik was briefly treated and released from a local hospital, no one was seriously injured in the incident.

WBZ also reports that even though Nawoichik admitted at the scene that she "may have had a drink" earlier in the night, she was not required to take either a field sobriety test or a breathalyzer test at the scene. However, officers were apparently convinced enough that she was inebriated that she was nonetheless arrested and charged with operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol.

The police department told WBZ that an Internal Affairs investigation has been opened into the incident, and that Nawoichik has been placed on personal leave pending the results of the investigation. Nawoichik is due back in court in February.

Although firearm deaths, particularly from "ambush attacks," are on the rise against police officers, car crashes have long been a leading cause of death among police officers in the United States. According to a 2022 report, the leading cause of death among police officers in 2021 was COVID-19, with 301 officers dying of the virus that year. Firearm deaths were the second-leading cause of death, responsible for 61 officer deaths, but car crashes were not far behind, causing 58 officer deaths that year.

Many years car crashes outpace firearm deaths for police officers. For the last decade, in fact, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) estimates that car crashes overall were the leading cause of deaths for police officers. Troublingly, many officers who die in car crashes are found to not be wearing seat belts or are engaged in other behaviors that they are trying to prevent from other drivers on the road. NIOSH and other organizations have, in recent years, sought to promote motor vehicle safety in order to make policing a safer job for officers.

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Leon Wolf

Leon Wolf

Managing Editor, News

Leon Wolf is the managing news editor for Blaze News. Previously, he worked as managing editor for RedState, as an in-house compliance attorney for several Super PACs, as a white-collar criminal defense attorney, and in communications for several Republican campaigns. You can reach him at lwolf@blazemedia.com.
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