Legislation introduced Monday would offer District agencies stricter enforcement power against repeat offenders in an effort to reduce dangerous driving.
A failure at the District’s Department of Motor Vehicles that allowed a woman with five DUI convictions to keep her license was not an isolated incident and.
Region’s air quality worsens as smoke from the Canadian wildfires drifts down. Chesapeake Bay Watershed earns C in biannual report card. Minnesota Commons affordable housing deal falls through leaving tenants in limbo.
Questions remain over how a driver with three drunken driving convictions in D.C. was able to hang onto her license before she got behind the wheel in March and crashed into a ride-share vehicle, killing three people.
DC Councilmembers have weighed in on the back and forth between the DC Superior Court and Mayor’s office as the District’s branches search for answers to a single question: How did a repeat DUI offender who killed three people in a crash still have a license?