|
| 
 |
Toren and Chris pose with Judge Cofield, Connecticut's first African American female judge, and her staff who are using From Binge to Blackout in court. Underage drinking offenders are required to read the book, and report back to the judge with an essay to read in court, and hopefully have a open dialoge about their choices.
|
 |
At RHAM High School there was a ''mock crash'' before the presentation.
|
 |
Know when to say when. Friends don't let friends drink and drive. Why ask why? I'm not even sure what these all mean to young drinkers, but they surely didn't stop this girl from throwing a few back before getting behind the wheel now did they?
|
 |
"Move along people, there's nothing to see here, besides the bloody corpse of a young girl who just died in a drunk driving crash. But seriously, folks, this happens every day, so go ahead and move on, now, that'd be great."
|
|
"Not even the jaws of life can save us now."
|
 |
Toren is again surrounded by a mob of angry youth who feel they have been targeted and most of all, duped by a profit-thirsty alcohol industry. "Seriously, guys, they fooled me, too," he states, trying to explain that he is no longer a slave to "Big Alcohol."
|
| < back to Journal main page |
|
|
|