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The sociologist Mirel Palada was accused of a criminal case after he refused to take biological samples to establish his blood alcohol level, after a traffic control carried out by the traffic police brigade, according to judicial sources cited by Agerpres.
Something interesting emerges from the statement from the Highway Brigade: “The driver gave off alcoholic breath”, which means he had bad breath.
“On October 8, around 11:30 p.m., police officers from the Highway Brigade in the exercise of their duties in the Sector 2 area stopped to control a vehicle driven by a 47-year-old man. that the driver was giving off alcohol breath, the policemen asked him to blow into the alcohol test device, but he refused, ”a statement from the Highway Brigade shows.
Key questions
Journalist Val Vâlcu raises some key questions. In the context where, theoretically, both had a protective mask and kept the distance of two meters, how did the police manage to feel the alcoholic breath? How did they smell like Mirel Palada if they had to protect themselves ?!
In other words, is it normal to put the driver, in a pandemic, to blow into the blister? Shouldn’t the procedure be changed in some way?
Isn’t there a risk of contamination for police officers in a pandemic if they inhale odors? And what is the need for police dogs that can distinguish smells, if Rutieră’s have this highly developed sense?
The case of apples and bananas
And if the police take just by smell, we remember the following case: A man from Slatina, left without a driver’s license after the traffic police found a blood alcohol level of 0.07 mg / liter of pure alcohol in the air expired, showed by blood test that he did not drink. He claims that he ate two apples and a banana a few hours before the test. The man said in February 2020 that agents did not believe him, so he requested blood samples. The results of the analysis proved him right.
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