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Ex-cop sets state record for DUI blood alcohol
Peyton Whitely and Sharon Pian Chan
Seattle Times
April 20, 2007
SEATTLE – A former Seattle police officer returned the highest blood-alcohol reading ever recorded by a Washington state driver, and she was charged with driving under the influence Wednesday.
Deana F. Jarrett, of Woodinville, Wash., registered a 0.47 percent blood-alcohol reading after striking two cars April 11, said Trooper Jeff Merrill, public-information officer for the State Patrol. The legal limit in Washington is 0.08 percent.
A blood-alcohol level above 0.40 percent is potentially lethal.
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"Someone who is an alcoholic will tolerate a higher blood-alcohol level," said Lynne Freeman, a doctor at Group Health's urgent-care clinic. "In someone who is not an alcoholic, they could die somewhere between 0.4 and 0.5."
For someone Jarrett's size – 5 feet 5 inches and 130 to 140 pounds – it would take about a fifth of liquor, 25.6 ounces, in a short period of time, to reach that blood-alcohol level, Freeman said.
"It would be many drinks," she said, and "probably straight alcohol rather than beer."
According to court records, Jarrett also goes by the name Deana Karst, and Seattle police spokesman Sean Whitcomb said Karst used to work for the department. According to city records, Karst began working as a police officer in 1979.
Jarrett, 54, who also was arrested in a traffic stop by Redmond, Wash., police April 10, faces two counts of DUI. She refused a breath test in that arrest, Redmond police said.
The next day, her blood-alcohol level registered 0.47 percent after she was involved in two crashes on eastbound Highway 520, Merrill said.
Five empty 4-ounce plastic bottles of vodka and two empty 12-ounce cans of beer were found on the front passenger seat, according to a trooper's report.
No one was injured in the crashes, which took place minutes apart, Merrill said.
"Most people black out at between 0.35 and higher," said Detective Tim Gately of the Redmond Police Department said.
After the April 10 arrest in Redmond, King County jail records show Jarrett was booked at 4:54 p.m. PDT and released after posting $500 bail at 8:16 p.m.
After the April 11 arrest, Jarrett first was taken to Evergreen Hospital, where she had to be restrained with soft wrist restraints and was combative, according to a Patrol report
Peyton Whitely and Sharon Pian Chan
Seattle Times
April 20, 2007
SEATTLE – A former Seattle police officer returned the highest blood-alcohol reading ever recorded by a Washington state driver, and she was charged with driving under the influence Wednesday.
Deana F. Jarrett, of Woodinville, Wash., registered a 0.47 percent blood-alcohol reading after striking two cars April 11, said Trooper Jeff Merrill, public-information officer for the State Patrol. The legal limit in Washington is 0.08 percent.
A blood-alcohol level above 0.40 percent is potentially lethal.
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"Someone who is an alcoholic will tolerate a higher blood-alcohol level," said Lynne Freeman, a doctor at Group Health's urgent-care clinic. "In someone who is not an alcoholic, they could die somewhere between 0.4 and 0.5."
For someone Jarrett's size – 5 feet 5 inches and 130 to 140 pounds – it would take about a fifth of liquor, 25.6 ounces, in a short period of time, to reach that blood-alcohol level, Freeman said.
"It would be many drinks," she said, and "probably straight alcohol rather than beer."
According to court records, Jarrett also goes by the name Deana Karst, and Seattle police spokesman Sean Whitcomb said Karst used to work for the department. According to city records, Karst began working as a police officer in 1979.
Jarrett, 54, who also was arrested in a traffic stop by Redmond, Wash., police April 10, faces two counts of DUI. She refused a breath test in that arrest, Redmond police said.
The next day, her blood-alcohol level registered 0.47 percent after she was involved in two crashes on eastbound Highway 520, Merrill said.
Five empty 4-ounce plastic bottles of vodka and two empty 12-ounce cans of beer were found on the front passenger seat, according to a trooper's report.
No one was injured in the crashes, which took place minutes apart, Merrill said.
"Most people black out at between 0.35 and higher," said Detective Tim Gately of the Redmond Police Department said.
After the April 10 arrest in Redmond, King County jail records show Jarrett was booked at 4:54 p.m. PDT and released after posting $500 bail at 8:16 p.m.
After the April 11 arrest, Jarrett first was taken to Evergreen Hospital, where she had to be restrained with soft wrist restraints and was combative, according to a Patrol report