Motor Vehicle Traffic Supervision, 78989-79010 [2015-31762]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 243 / Friday, December 18, 2015 / Proposed Rules
Paragraph 6005: Class E Airspace Areas
Extending Upward From 700 Feet or More
Above the Surface of the Earth
listed in this document will be
published subsequently in the Order.
Regulatory Notices and Analyses
The FAA has determined that this
regulation only involves an established
body of technical regulations for which
frequent and routine amendments are
necessary to keep them operationally
current, is non-controversial and
unlikely to result in adverse or negative
comments. It, therefore: (1) Is not a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
Executive Order 12866; (2) is not a
‘‘significant rule’’ under DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures (44
FR 11034; February 26, 1979); and (3)
does not warrant preparation of a
regulatory evaluation as the anticipated
impact is so minimal. Since this is a
routine matter that will only affect air
traffic procedures and air navigation, it
is certified that this rule, when
promulgated, would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the criteria of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
Environmental Review
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army
32 CFR Part 634
ACTION:
Accordingly, pursuant to the
authority delegated to me, the Federal
Aviation Administration proposes to
amend 14 CFR part 71 as follows:
1. The authority citation for 14 CFR
part 71 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g), 40103,
40113, 40120; E.O. 10854, 24 FR 9565, 3 CFR,
1959–1963 Comp., p. 389.
[Amended]
2. The incorporation by reference in
14 CFR 71.1 of FAA Order 7400.9Z,
Airspace Designations and Reporting
Points, dated August 6, 2015, and
effective September 15, 2015, is
amended as follows:
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The Department of the Army
proposes to revise its regulation
concerning military traffic supervision
on Department of Defense installations
worldwide.
DATES: Consideration will be given to all
comments received by: February 16,
2016.
You may submit comments,
identified by 32 CFR part 634, Docket
No. USA–2014–0005 and or RIN 0702–
AA66, by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Department of Defense, Office
of the Deputy Chief Management
Officer, Directorate of Oversight and
Compliance, Regulatory and Audit
Matters Office, 9010 Defense Pentagon,
Washington, DC 20301–9010.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket number or Regulatory
Information Number (RIN) for this
Federal Register document. The general
policy for comments and other
submissions from members of the public
is to make these submissions available
for public viewing on the Internet at
https://www.regulations.gov as they are
ADDRESSES:
PART 71—DESIGNATION OF CLASS A,
B, C, D, AND E AIRSPACE AREAS; AIR
TRAFFIC SERVICE ROUTES; AND
REPORTING POINTS
■
Department of the Army, DoD.
Proposed rule.
SUMMARY:
The Proposed Amendment
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BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
AGENCY:
Airspace, Incorporation by reference,
Navigation (air).
18:10 Dec 17, 2015
[FR Doc. 2015–31644 Filed 12–17–15; 8:45 am]
Motor Vehicle Traffic Supervision
List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 71
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Issued in Seattle, Washington, on
December 10, 2015.
Tracey Johnson,
Manager, Operations Support Group, Western
Service Center.
RIN 0702–AA66
Docket No. USA–2014–0005]
This proposal will be subject to an
environmental analysis in accordance
with FAA Order 1050.1F,
‘‘Environmental Impacts: Policies and
Procedures’’ prior to any FAA final
regulatory action.
§ 71.1
AWP CA E5 Truckee, CA [Modified]
Truckee-Tahoe Airport, CA
(Lat. 39°19′12″ N., Long. 120°08′22″ W.)
That airspace extending upward from 700
feet above the surface within a 4.2-mile
radius of the Truckee-Tahoe Airport, and
within 2 miles each side of the 15° bearing
from the airport extending from the 4.2-mile
radius to 19 miles north of the airport, and
within 2 miles each side of the 328° bearing
from the airport extending from the 4.2-mile
radius to 16.5 miles northwest of the airport.
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78989
received without change, including any
personal identifiers or contact
information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
John Hargitt, (703) 424–3309.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Executive Summary
I. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
a. The publication of this proposed
rule announces administrative revision
of a current Army regulation covering
motor vehicle traffic supervision. It
outlines policy on vehicle registration;
implements the 0.08 blood alcohol
content as the standard for adverse
administrative actions; permits
involuntary extraction of blood under
revised Military Rules of Evidence in
cases where intoxicated driving is
suspected; provides policy on towing,
storing, and impounding vehicles;
adopts the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration technical
standards for breathalyzer equipment;
establishes traffic points for seat belt
and child restraint device violations;
and requires that new safety
requirements be included in the
installation traffic code. It implements
Department of Defense Directive
5525.04, ‘‘Enforcement of the State
Traffic Laws on DoD Installations’’
(available at https://www.dtic.mil/whs/
directives/corres/pdf/552504p.pdf), and
Department of Defense Instruction
6055.04, ‘‘DoD Traffic Safety Program’’
(available at https://www.dtic.mil/whs/
directives/corres/pdf/605504p.pdf). It
also implements portions of Department
of Defense Instruction 7730.47,
‘‘Defense Incident-Based Reporting
System (DIBRS)’’ (available at https://
www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/pdf/
773047p.pdf), that apply to dispositions.
This regulation was most recently
published in the Federal Register on
April 12, 2005 (70 FR 18969).
b. The legal authority for this
regulatory action is: 70 FR 18969, 70 FR
18982, 10 U.S.C. 2575, 18 U.S.C. 13.
II. Summary of the Major Provisions of
the Regulatory Action in Question
The major provisions of this
regulatory action include: Driving
privileges, suspensions, revocations,
vehicle registration, traffic supervision
and offense reporting, accident
investigation and reporting, release of
information, processing drunk drivers,
and impounding privately owned
vehicles.
III. Cost and Benefits
This proposed rule will not have a
monetary effect upon the public. This
proposed rule facilitates information
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sharing between authorized law
enforcement agencies to enhance
protection of personnel and resources
critical to DoD mission assurance. Costs
of law enforcement, personnel,
reporting systems and records
management are offset through the
efficient collection of data to support
traffic enforcement on military
installations and enhance safety through
intelligence led policing efforts. These
efforts allow the efficient deployment of
police and security forces proactively to
deter, prevent and mitigate losses due to
criminal behavior and civil violations.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department of the Army has
determined that the Regulatory
Flexibility Act does not apply because
the proposed rule does not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
within the meaning of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–612.
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Department of the Army has
determined that the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act does not apply
because the proposed rule does not
include a mandate that may result in
estimated costs to State, local or tribal
governments in the aggregate, or the
private sector, of $100 million or more.
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D. National Environmental Policy Act
The Department of the Army has
determined that the National
Environmental Policy Act does not
apply because the proposed rule does
not have an adverse impact on the
environment.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Department of the Army has
determined that the Paperwork
Reduction Act doesn’t apply. There is
no additional burden for collection of
information from the public or the
addition of additional government forms
associated with this rulemaking.
Information collected to support this
proposed rule is that information
normally collected in the performance
of law and order and traffic enforcement
operations across the United States.
Information collected is used to
determine wants and warrants issued
for criminal offenders, persons driving
under suspended or revoked licenses,
and traffic point assessment. Failure to
provide driver’s license or vehicle
registration information may result in
detention and fines. Procedures and
business processes outlined in this
proposed rule provide uniform policy
concerning military traffic supervision
practices to improve productivity,
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18:10 Dec 17, 2015
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efficiency, and effectiveness of law
enforcement traffic supervision,
reporting efforts including the reduction
of information collection burdens on the
public and the improvement of law
enforcement service delivery while
maintaining privacy, confidentiality and
information systems protections.
F. Executive Order 12630 (Government
Actions and Interference With
Constitutionally Protected Property
Rights)
The Department of the Army has
determined that Executive Order 12630
does not apply because the proposed
rule does not impair private property
rights.
G. Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory
Planning and Review) and Executive
Order 13563 (Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review)
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distribute impacts, and equity).
Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the
importance of quantifying both costs
and benefits, of reducing costs, of
harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. This proposed rule has been
designated a ‘‘significant regulatory
action,’’ although not economically
significant, under section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866. Accordingly,
the proposed rule has been reviewed by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB).
H. Executive Order 13045 (Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risk and Safety Risks)
The Department of the Army has
determined that according to the criteria
defined in Executive Order 13045. This
proposed rule does not apply since it
does not implement or require actions
impacting environmental health or
safety risks to children.
I. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
The Department of the Army has
determined that according to the criteria
defined in Executive Order 13132 this
proposed rule does not apply because it
will not have a substantial effect on the
States, on the relationship between the
national government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and
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responsibilities among various levels of
government.
Thomas S. Blair,
Chief, Law Enforcement Policy Branch, Office
of the Provost Marshal General.
List of Subjects in 32 CFR Part 634
Crime, Distracted driving, Driving
under the influence of drugs or alcohol,
Investigations, Law, Law enforcement,
Law enforcement officers, Military law,
Penalties, Personal safety and protection
equipment, Text messaging, Traffic, Use
of electronic devices.
For reasons stated in the preamble the
Department of the Army proposes to
revise 32 CFR part 634 to read as
follows:
PART 634—MOTOR VEHICLE TRAFFIC
SUPERVISION
Subpart A—Introduction
Sec.
634.1 Purpose.
634.2 References.
634.3 Explanation of abbreviations and
terms.
634.4 Responsibilities.
634.5 Program objectives.
Subpart B—Driving Privileges
634.6 Requirements for driving privileges.
634.7 Stopping and inspecting personnel or
vehicles.
634.8 Implied consent.
634.9 Suspension or revocation of driving
or privately owned vehicle registration
privileges.
634.10 Remedial driver training programs.
634.11 Administrative due process for
suspensions and revocations.
634.12 Army administrative actions against
intoxicated drivers.
634.13 Alcohol and drug abuse programs.
634.14 Restoration of driving privileges
upon acquittal of intoxicated driving.
634.15 Restricted driving privileges or
probation.
634.16 Reciprocal State-Military action.
634.17 Extensions of suspensions and
revocations.
634.18 Reinstatement of driving privileges.
Subpart C—Motor Vehicle Registration
634.19 Registration policy.
634.20 Privately owned vehicle operation
requirements.
634.21 Department of Defense Form 2220.
634.22 Gold Star decals.
634.23 Termination or denial of
registration.
634.24 Specified consent to impoundment.
Subpart D—Traffic Supervision
634.25 Traffic planning and codes.
634.26 Installation traffic codes.
634.27 Traffic law enforcement principles.
634.28 Speed-measuring devices.
634.29 Traffic accident investigation.
634.30 Traffic accident investigation
reports.
634.31 Use of traffic accident investigation
report data.
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634.32 Parking.
634.33 Traffic violation reports.
634.34 Training of law enforcement
personnel.
634.35 Blood alcohol concentration
standards.
634.36 Chemical testing policies and
procedures.
634.37 Detection, apprehension, and testing
of intoxicated drivers.
634.38 Voluntary breath and bodily fluid
testing based on implied consent.
634.39 Involuntary extraction of bodily
fluids in traffic cases.
634.40 Testing at the request of the
apprehended person.
634.41 General off installation traffic
activities.
634.42 Compliance with State laws.
634.43 Civil-military cooperative programs.
Subpart E—Driving Records and the Traffic
Point System
634.44 Driving records.
634.45 The traffic point system.
634.46 Point system application.
634.47 Point system procedures.
634.48 Disposition of driving records.
Subpart F—Impounding Privately Owned
Vehicles
634.49 General.
634.50 Standards for impoundment.
634.51 Towing and storage.
634.52 Procedures for impoundment.
634.53 Search incident to impoundment
based on criminal activity.
634.54 Disposition of vehicles after
impoundment.
Subpart G—List of State Driver’s License
Agencies
634.55 List of State driver’s license
agencies.
Authority: 10 U.S.C. 30112(g); 5 U.S.C.
2951; Pub. L. 89–564; 89–670; 91–605; and
93–87.
Subpart A—Introduction
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§ 634.1
Purpose.
(a) This subpart establishes policy,
responsibilities, and procedures for
motor vehicle traffic supervision on
military installations in the continental
United States (CONUS) and overseas
areas. This includes but is not limited
to the following:
(1) Granting, suspending, or revoking
the privilege to operate a privately
owned vehicle (POV).
(2) Registration of POVs.
(3) Administration of vehicle
registration and driver performance
records.
(4) Driver improvement programs.
(5) Police traffic supervision.
(6) Off-installation traffic activities.
(b) Commanders in overseas areas are
authorized to modify these policies and
procedures in the following instances:
(1) When dictated by host nation
relationships, treaties, and agreements.
(2) When traffic operations under
military supervision necessitate
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measures to safeguard and protect the
morale, discipline, and good order in
the Services.
§ 634.2
References.
Required and related publications
along with prescribed and referenced
forms are listed in Appendix A of AR
190–5.
§ 634.3
terms.
Explanation of abbreviations and
Abbreviations and special terms used
in this subpart are explained in the
Glossary of AR 190–5. It is available on
the internet at: www.usapa.army.mil.
§ 634.4
Responsibilities.
(a) Departmental. The Provost
Marshal General, Headquarters,
Department of the Army (HQDA);
Director, Naval Criminal Investigative
Service, U.S. Navy (USN); Headquarters,
Air Force Security Forces Center;
Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps
(USMC); Staff Director, Command
Security Office, Headquarters, Defense
Logistics Agency (DLA), and Chief,
National Guard Bureau will—
(1) Exercise staff supervision over
programs for motor vehicle traffic
supervision.
(2) Develop standard policies and
procedures that include establishing an
automated records program on traffic
supervision.
(3) Maintain liaison with interested
staff agencies and other military
departments on traffic supervision.
(4) Maintain liaison with
departmental safety personnel on traffic
safety and accident reporting systems.
(5) Coordinate with national, regional,
and state traffic officials and agencies,
and actively participate in conferences
and workshops sponsored by the
Government or private groups at the
national level.
(6) Help organize and monitor police
traffic supervision training.
(7) Participate in the national effort to
reduce intoxicated driving.
(b) All major commanders. Major
commanders of the Army, Navy, Air
Force, Marine Corps, and DLA will—
(1) Manage traffic supervision in their
commands.
(2) Cooperate with the support
programs of state and regional highway
traffic safety organizations.
(3) Coordinate regional traffic
supervision activities with other major
military commanders in assigned
geographic areas of responsibility.
(4) Monitor agreements between
installations and host state authorities
for reciprocal reporting of suspension
and revocation of driving privileges.
(5) Participate in state and host nation
efforts to reduce intoxicated driving.
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(6) Establish awards and recognition
programs to recognize successful
installation efforts to eliminate
intoxicated driving. Ensure that criteria
for these awards are positive in nature
and include more than just
apprehensions for intoxicated driving.
(7) Modify policies and procedures
when required by host nation treaties or
agreements.
(c) Major Army commanders. Major
Army commanders will ensure
subordinate installations implement all
provisions of this part.
(d) Commanding General, U.S. Army
Training and Doctrine Command (CG,
TRADOC). The CG, TRADOC will
ensure that technical training for
functional users is incorporated into
service school instructional programs.
(e) Installation or activity commander,
Director of Military Support and State
Adjutant General. The installation or
activity commander (for the Navy, the
term installation shall refer to either the
regional commander or installation
commanding officer, whoever has
ownership of the traffic program) will—
(1) Establish an effective traffic
supervision program.
(2) Cooperate with civilian police
agencies and other local, state, or federal
government agencies concerned with
traffic supervision.
(3) Ensure that traffic supervision is
properly integrated in the overall
installation traffic safety program.
(4) Actively participate in Alcohol
Safety Action Projects (ASAP) in
neighboring communities.
(5) Ensure that active duty Army law
enforcement personnel follow the
provisions of AR 190–45 in reporting all
criminal violations and utilize the Army
Law Enforcement Reporting and
Tracking System (ALERTS) to support
reporting requirements and procedures.
Air Force personnel engaged in law
enforcement and adjudication activities
will follow the provisions of AFI 31–203
in reporting all criminal and traffic
violations, and utilize the Security
Forces Management Information
Systems (SFMIS) to support reporting
requirements and procedures.
(6) Implement the terms of this part in
accordance with the provisions of the
Federal Service Labor-Management
Relations Statute, 5 U.S.C. chapter 71
and title 5 Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR) parts 7101 through 7905.
(7) Revoke driving privileges in
accordance with this part.
(f) Installation law enforcement
officer. The installation law
enforcement officer will—
(1) Exercise overall staff responsibility
for directing, regulating, and controlling
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traffic, and enforcing laws and
regulations pertaining to traffic control.
(2) Assist traffic engineering functions
at installations by participating in traffic
control studies designed to obtain
information on traffic problems and
usage patterns.
(g) Safety officer. Safety officers will
participate in and develop traffic
accident prevention initiatives in
support of the installation traffic safety
program.
(h) Facility engineer (public works
officer at Navy installations). The
facility engineer, engineer officer or
civil engineer at Air Force installations,
in close coordination with the law
enforcement officer, will:
(1) Perform that phase of engineering
concerned with the planning, design,
construction, and maintenance of
streets, highways, and abutting lands.
(2) Select, determine appropriate
design, procure, construct, install, and
maintain permanent traffic and parking
control devices in coordination with the
law enforcement officer and installation
safety officer.
(3) Ensure that traffic signs, signals,
and pavement markings conform to the
standards in the current Manual on
Uniform Traffic Control Devices for
Streets and Highways.
(4) Ensure that planning, design,
construction, and maintenance of streets
and highways conform to the Highway
Safety Manual (HSM) as implemented
by the Army.
(i) Traffic engineer. The traffic
engineer, in close coordination with the
law enforcement officer, will:
(1) Conduct formal traffic engineering
studies.
(2) Apply traffic engineering
measures, including traffic control
devices, to reduce the number and
severity of traffic accidents. (If there is
no installation traffic engineer,
installation commanders may request
these services through channels from
the Commander, Military Surface
Deployment and Distribution
Command, 1 Soldier Way, Scott AFB, IL
62225).
(j) Army Alcohol and Drug Control
Officer (ADCO). The ADCO will provide
treatment and education services to
personnel with alcohol or drug abuse
problems.
(k) Navy Substance Abuse
Rehabilitation Program (SARP)
Directors. These directors will—
(1) Supervise the alcohol and/or drug
rehabilitation services to personnel with
alcohol or drug abuse problems.
(2) Provide remedial and/or
motivational education for all persons
identified as alcohol or drug abusers
who are evaluated as not dependent on
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alcohol or drugs and who have been
referred to level one rehabilitation by
their commands.
(l) Marine Corps Substance Abuse
Program Officer. This officer will
provide alcohol and/or drug education,
treatment, and rehabilitation services to
personnel with alcohol/drug abuse
problems.
(m) DLA Employee Assistance
Program Officer. This officer will
provide alcohol/drug counseling and
referral services to identified personnel
with alcohol and/or drug abuse
problems in accordance with
procedures prescribed by the Labor
Relations Officer, Office of Human
Resource, HQ DLA.
(n) Alcohol/Drug Abuse Prevention
Treatment (ADAPT) program. Air Force
Commanders will refer personnel
identified with alcohol and/or drug
abuse problems to this program in
accordance with established procedures.
§ 634.5
Program objectives.
(a) The objectives of motor vehicle
traffic supervision are to assure—
(1) Safe and efficient movement of
personnel and vehicles.
(2) Reduction of traffic deaths,
injuries, and property damage from
traffic accidents. Most traffic accidents
can be prevented. Investigation of motor
vehicle accidents should examine all
factors, operator status, vehicle
condition, and supervisory control
measures involved.
(3) Integration of installation safety,
engineering, legal, medical, and law
enforcement resources into the
installation traffic planning process.
(4) Removal of intoxicated drivers
from installation roadways.
(b) [Reserved]
Subpart B—Driving Privileges
§ 634.6 Requirements for driving
privileges.
(a) Driving a Government vehicle or
POV on military installations is a
privilege granted by the installation
commander. Persons who accept the
privilege must—
(1) Be lawfully licensed to operate
motor vehicles in appropriate
classifications and not be under
suspension or revocation in any state or
host country.
(2) Comply with laws and regulations
governing motor vehicle operations on
any U.S. military installation.
(3) Comply with installation
registration requirements in § 634.19 of
this section. Vehicle registration may be
required on all Army installations
through use of the Vehicle Registration
System (VRS). Vehicle registration is
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required on all Air Force and DLA
installations and on National Guard
installations as directed by the Chief,
National Guard Bureau.
(4) Possess, while operating a motor
vehicle and produce on request by law
enforcement personnel, the following:
(i) Proof of vehicle ownership or state
registration if required by the issuing
state or host nation.
(ii) A valid state, host nation, overseas
command, or international driver’s
license and/or OF 346 (U.S. Government
Motor Vehicle Operator’s Identification
Card), as applicable to the class vehicle
to be operated, supported by a DD Form
2 (Armed Forces of the United States
Geneva Convention Identification Card),
U.S. Uniformed Services Identification
Card, Common Access Card (CAC) or
other appropriate identification for nonDepartment of Defense (DOD) civilians.
(iii) A valid record of motor vehicle
safety inspection, as required by the
state or host nation and valid proof of
insurance if required by the state or
locality.
(iv) Any regulatory permits, or other
pertinent documents relative to
shipping and transportation of special
cargo.
(v) When appropriate, documents that
establish identification and status of
cargo or occupants.
(vi) Proof of valid insurance. Proof of
insurance consists of an insurance card,
or other documents issued by the
insurance company, that has a policy
effective date and an expiration date.
(b) Operators of Government motor
vehicles must have proof of
authorization to operate the vehicle.
§ 634.7 Stopping and inspecting personnel
or vehicles.
(a) Government vehicles may be
stopped by law enforcement personnel
on military installations based on the
installation commander’s policy.
(1) Government vehicles may be
stopped on or off installations as
determined by host nation agreement
and command policy in overseas areas.
(2) Stops and inspections of vehicles
at installation gates or entry points and
in restricted areas will be conducted
according to command policy.
(b) Stops and inspections of POVs
within the military installation, other
than at restricted areas or at an
installation gate, are authorized only
when there is a reasonable suspicion of
criminal activity, or a violation of a
traffic regulation, or the installation
commander’s policy. Marine Corps
users are guided by publication of
Marine Corps order and Military Rules
of Evidence 311–316 and local
command regulations. DLA users are
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guided by DLA One Book Process
Chapter, Search and Seizure.
(c) At the time of stop, the driver and
occupants may be required to display all
pertinent documents, including but not
limited to:
(1) DD Form 2 (Active, Reserve,
Retired, etc.)
(2) Documents that establish the
identity and status of civilians; for
example, Common Access Card (CAC),
DD Form 1173 (Uniformed Services
Identification and Privilege Card), DA
Form 1602 (Civilian Identification), AF
Form 354 (Civilian Identification Card),
DD Form 2 (Armed Forces of the United
States Identification Card), post pass,
national identity card, passport or other
identification.
(3) Proper POV registration
documents.
(4) Host nation vehicle registration
documents, if applicable.
(5) Authorization to operate a
Government vehicle, if applicable.
(6) Drivers license or OF 346 valid for
the particular vehicle and area of
operation.
(7) Proof of insurance.
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§ 634.8
Implied consent.
(a) Implied consent to blood, breath,
or urine tests. Persons who drive or
operate motor vehicles (including cars,
motorcycles, mopeds, buses, trucks, or
off-road vehicles [tractors, forklifts,
cranes, backhoes, bulldozers, golf carts
and all terrain vehicles]) or watercraft
on the installation shall be deemed to
have given their consent to evidential
tests for alcohol or other drug content of
their blood, breath, or urine when
lawfully stopped, apprehended, or cited
for any offense allegedly committed
while driving or in physical control of
a motor vehicle or watercraft on military
installations to determine the influence
of intoxicants.
(b) Implied consent to impoundment.
Any person granted the privilege to
operate or register a motor vehicle on a
military installation shall be deemed to
have given his or her consent for the
removal and temporary impoundment
of the POV when it is parked illegally,
or for unreasonable periods, as
determined by the installation
commander or applicable authority,
interfering with military operations,
creating a safety hazard, disabled by
accident, left unattended in a restricted
or controlled area, or abandoned. Such
persons further agree to reimburse the
United States for the cost of towing and
storage should their motor vehicle be
removed or impounded. Existence of
these conditions will be determined by
the installation commander or designee.
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(c) Any person who operates,
registers, or is in control of a motor
vehicle on a military installation
involved in a motor vehicle or criminal
infraction shall be informed that notice
of the violation of law or regulation will
be forwarded to the Department of
Motor Vehicles (DMV) of the host state
and/or home of record for the
individual, and to the NHTSA’s
National Driver Register, when
applicable.
§ 634.9 Suspension or revocation of
driving or privately owned vehicle
registration privileges.
The installation commander or
designee may for cause, or any lawful
reason, administratively suspend or
revoke driving privileges on the
installation. The suspension or
revocation of installation driving
privileges or POV registrations, for
lawful reasons unrelated to traffic
violations or safe vehicle operation, is
not limited or restricted by this part.
(a) Suspension. (1) Driving privileges
are usually suspended when other
measures fail to improve a driver’s
performance. Measures should include
counseling, remedial driving training,
and rehabilitation programs if violator is
entitled to the programs. Driving
privileges may also be suspended for up
to six months if a driver continually
violates installation parking regulations.
The commander will determine
standards for suspension based on
frequency of parking violations and
publish those standards. Aboard Navy
installations, any vehicle parked in a
fire lane will be towed at the owner’s
expense. Any vehicle parked without
authorization in an area restricted due
to force protection measures may
subject the driver to immediate
suspension by the installation
commanding officer. Vehicle will be
towed at the owner’s and/or operator’s
expense.
(2) The installation commander has
discretionary power to withdraw the
authorization of active duty military
personnel, DOD civilian employees, and
non-appropriated funds (NAF)
employees, contractors and
subcontractors to operate Government
vehicles.
(3) Immediate suspension of
installation or overseas command POV
driving privileges pending resolution of
an intoxicated driving incident is
authorized for active duty military
personnel, family members, retired
members of the military services, DOD
civilian personnel, and others with
installation or overseas command
driving privileges, regardless of the
geographic location of the intoxicated
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driving incident. Suspension is
authorized for non-DOD affiliated
civilians only with respect to incidents
occurring on the installation or in areas
subject to military traffic supervision.
After a review of available information
as specified in § 634.11, installation
driving privileges will be immediately
suspended pending resolution of the
intoxicated driving accident in the
following circumstances:
(i) Refusal to take or complete a
lawfully requested chemical test to
determine contents of blood for alcohol
or other drugs.
(ii) Operating a motor vehicle with a
blood alcohol content (BAC) of 0.08
percent by volume (0.08 grams per 100
milliliters) or higher or in violation of
the law of the jurisdiction that is being
assimilated on the military installation.
(iii) Operating a motor vehicle with a
BAC of 0.05 percent by volume but less
than 0.08 percent blood alcohol by
volume in violation of the law of the
jurisdiction in which the vehicle is
being operated if the jurisdiction
imposes a suspension solely on the
basis of the BAC level (as measured in
grams per 100 milliliters).
(iv) On an arrest report or other
official documentation of the
circumstances of an apprehension for
intoxicated driving.
(b) Revocation. (1) The revocation of
installation or overseas command POV
driving privileges is a severe
administrative measure to be exercised
for serious moving violations or when
other available corrective actions fail to
produce the desired driver
improvement. Revocation of the driving
privilege will be for a specified period,
but never less than six months, applies
at all military installations, and remains
in effect upon reassignment.
(2) Driving privileges are subject to
revocation when an individual fails to
comply with any of the conditions
requisite to the granting privilege (see
§ 634.6). Revocation of installation
driving and registration privileges is
authorized for military personnel,
family members, civilian employees of
DOD, contractors, and other individuals
with installation driving privileges. For
civilian guests, revocation is authorized
only with respect to incidents occurring
on the installation or in the areas subject
to military traffic supervision.
(3) Driving privileges will be revoked
for a mandatory period of not less than
one year in the following circumstances:
(i) The installation commander or
designee has determined that the person
lawfully apprehended for driving under
the influence refused to submit to or
complete a test to measure the alcohol
content in the blood, or detect the
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presence of any other drug, as required
by the law of the jurisdiction, or
installation traffic code, or by Service
directive.
(ii) A conviction, non-judicial
punishment, or a military or civilian
administrative action resulting in the
suspension or revocation of driver’s
license for intoxicated driving.
Appropriate official documentation of
such conviction is required as the basis
for revocation.
(4) When temporary suspensions
under paragraph (a)(3) of this section are
followed by revocations, the period of
revocation is computed beginning from
the date the original suspension was
imposed, exclusive of any period during
which full driving privileges may have
been restored pending resolution of
charges. (Example: Privileges were
initially suspended on January 1, 2000
for a charge of intoxicated driving with
a BAC of 0.14 percent. A hearing was
held, extreme family hardship was
substantiated, and privileges were
restored on February 1 pending
resolution of the charge. On March 1,
2000, the driver was convicted for
intoxicated driving. The mandatory
1-year revocation period will consist of
January 2000 plus March 2000 through
January 2001, for a total of 12 months
with no installation driving privileges).
(c) Army provost marshals will use
the automated VRS to develop and
maintain records showing that an
individual’s driving privileges have
been revoked.
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§ 634.10 Remedial driver training
programs.
(a) Navy activities will comply with
OPNAVINST 5100.12 Series, and
Marine Corps activities with current
edition of MCO 5100.19C for
establishment of remedial training
programs.
(b) Installation commanders may
establish a remedial driver-training
program to instruct and educate
personnel requiring additional training.
Personnel may be referred to a remedial
program on the basis of their individual
driving history or incidents requiring
additional training. The curriculum
should provide instruction to improve
driving performance and compliance
with traffic laws.
(c) Installation/unit commanders will
direct attendance at an Army Traffic
Safety Training Program remedial
driving class for any person who has
acquired more than five but less than
twelve traffic points within a six-month
period. Commanders can refer to
sections below for detailed
determination of points per infraction.
Personnel may be referred to a remedial
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program on the basis of their individual
driving history or incidents requiring
additional training.
(d) Installation commanders may
schedule periodic courses, or if not
practical, arrange for participation in
courses conducted by local civil
authorities.
(e) Active Duty Soldiers and
Department of the Army (DA) Civilians
required to drive Government owned
vehicles may attend remedial courses on
the installation, or similar courses off
the installation, which incur no expense
to the Government. Contractor
employees and family members of
military personnel will attend similar
remedial courses off the installation,
which incur no expense to the
Government.
(f) Commanders will require
individuals, inside or outside normal
duty hours, to attend the courses or lose
installation driving privileges.
(g) State approved driver
improvement programs may be used to
fulfill the requirement where an Army
standardized course is not provided.
§ 634.11 Administrative due process for
suspensions and revocations.
(a) Individual Services will
promulgate separate regulations
establishing administrative due process
procedures for suspension or revocation
of driving privileges. The procedures in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section
apply to actions taken by Army
commanders with respect to Army
military personnel and family members
and to civilian personnel operating
motor vehicles on Army installations.
For Marine Corps users, the provisions
of this section apply. For Air Force
users, a preliminary suspension for
intoxicated driving remains in effect
until the installation commander makes
a final decision. Requested hearings
must take place within a reasonable
period, which is determined by the
installation commander.
(b) For offenses other than intoxicated
driving, suspension or revocation of the
installation driving privilege will not
become effective until the installation
commander or designee notifies the
affected person and offers that person an
administrative hearing. Suspension or
revocation will take place 14 calendar
days after written notice is received
unless the affected person makes an
application for a hearing within this
period. Such application will stay the
pending suspension or revocation for a
period of 14 calendar days.
(1) If, due to action by the
government, a hearing is not held
within 14 calendar days, the suspension
will not take place until such time as
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the person is granted a hearing and is
notified of the action of the installation
commander or designee. However, if the
affected person requests that the hearing
be continued to a date beyond the 14day period, the suspension or
revocation will become effective
immediately on receipt of notice that
the request for continuance has been
granted, and remain in force pending a
hearing at a scheduled hearing date.
(2) If it is determined as a result of a
hearing to suspend or revoke the
affected person’s driving privilege, the
suspension or revocation will become
effective when the person receives the
written notification of such action. In
the event that written notification
cannot be verified, either through a
return receipt for mail or delivery
through command channels, the hearing
authority will determine the effective
date on a case-by-case basis.
(3) If the revocation or suspension is
imposed after such hearing, the person
whose driving privilege has been
suspended or revoked will have the
right to appeal or request
reconsideration. Such requests must be
forwarded through command channels
to the installation commander within 14
calendar days from the date the
individual is notified of the suspension
or revocation resulting from the
administrative hearing. The suspension
or revocation will remain in effect
pending a final ruling on the request.
Requests for restricted privileges will be
considered per § 634.15.
(4) If driving privileges are
temporarily restored (i.e. for family
hardship) pending resolution of charges,
the period of revocation (after final
authority determination) will still total
the mandatory 12 months. The final
date of the revocation will be adjusted
to account for the period when the
violator’s privileges were temporarily
restored, as this period does not count
towards the revocation time.
(c) For drunk driving or driving under
the influence offenses, reliable evidence
readily available will be presented
promptly to an individual designated by
the installation commander for review
and authorization for immediate
suspension of installation driving
privileges.
(1) The reviewer should be any officer
to include GS–11 and above, designated
in writing by the installation or garrison
commander whose primary duties are
not in the field of law enforcement.
(2) Reliable evidence includes witness
statements, military or civilian police
report of apprehension, chemical test
results if completed, refusal to consent
to complete chemical testing,
videotapes, statements by the
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apprehended individual, field sobriety
or preliminary breath tests results, and
other pertinent evidence. Immediate
suspension should not be based solely
on published lists of arrested persons,
statements by parties not witnessing the
apprehension, or telephone
conversations or other information not
supported by documented and reliable
evidence.
(3) Reviews normally will be
accomplished within the first normal
duty day following final assembly of
evidence.
(4) Installation commanders may
authorize the installation law
enforcement officer to conduct reviews
and authorize suspensions in cases
where the designated reviewer is not
reasonably available and, in the
judgment of the installation law
enforcement officer, such immediate
action is warranted. Air Force Security
Forces personnel act in an advisory
capacity to installation commanders.
Review by the designated officer will
follow as soon as practical in such
cases. When a suspension notice is
based on the law enforcement officer’s
review, there is no requirement for
confirmation notice following
subsequent review by the designated
officer.
(5) For active duty military personnel,
final written notice of suspension for
intoxicated driving will be provided to
the individual’s chain of command for
immediate presentation to the
individual. Air Force Security Forces
provide a copy of the temporary
suspension to the individual at the time
of the incident or may provide a copy
of the final determination at the time of
the incident, as pre-determined by the
final action authority.
(6) For civilian personnel, written
notice of suspension for intoxicated
driving will normally be provided
without delay via certified mail. Air
Force Security Forces personnel provide
a copy of the temporary suspension to
the individual at the time of the
incident or may provide a copy of the
final determination at the time of the
incident, as pre-determined by the final
action authority. If the person is
employed on the installation, such
notice will be forwarded through the
military or civilian supervisor. When
the notice of suspension is forwarded
through the supervisor, the person
whose privileges are suspended will be
required to provide written
acknowledgment of receipt of the
suspension notice.
(7) Notices of suspension for
intoxicated driving will include the
following:
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(i) The fact that the suspension can be
made a revocation under § 634.9(b).
(ii) The right to request, in writing, a
hearing before the installation
commander or designee to determine if
post driving privileges will be restored
pending resolution of the charge; and
that such request must be made within
14 calendar days of the final notice of
suspension.
(iii) The right of military personnel to
be represented by counsel at his or her
own expense and to present evidence
and witnesses at his or her own
expense. Installation commanders will
determine the availability of any local
active duty representatives requested.
(iv) The right of Department of
Defense civilian employees to have a
personal representative present at the
administrative hearing in accordance
with applicable laws and regulations.
(v) Written acknowledgment of
receipt to be signed by the individual
whose privileges are to be suspended or
revoked.
(8) If a hearing is requested, it must
take place within 14 calendar days of
receipt of the request. The suspension
for intoxicated driving will remain in
effect until a decision has been made by
the installation commander or designee,
but will not exceed 14 calendar days
after the hearing while awaiting the
decision. If no decision has been made
by that time, full driving privileges will
be restored until such time as the
accused is notified of a decision to
continue the suspension.
(9) Hearing on suspension actions
under § 634.9(a) for drunk or impaired
driving pending resolution of charges
will cover only the following pertinent
issues of whether—
(i) The law enforcement official had
reasonable grounds to believe the
person was driving or in actual physical
control of a motor vehicle under the
influence of alcohol or other drugs.
(ii) The person was lawfully cited or
apprehended for a driving under the
influence offense.
(iii) The person was lawfully
requested to submit his or her blood,
breath, or urine in order to determine
the content of alcohol or other drugs,
and was informed of the implied
consent policy (consequences of refusal
to take or complete the test).
(iv) The person refused to submit to
the test for alcohol or other drug content
of blood, breath, or urine; failed to
complete the test; submitted to the test
and the result was 0.08 or higher blood
alcohol content, or between 0.05 and
0.08 in violation of the law of the
jurisdiction in which the vehicle in
being operated if the jurisdiction
imposes a suspension solely on the
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78995
basis of the BAC level; or showed
results indicating the presence of other
drugs for an on-post apprehension or in
violation of State laws for an off-post
apprehension.
(v) The testing methods were valid
and reliable and the results accurately
evaluated.
(10) For revocation actions under
§ 634.9(b)(3) for intoxicated driving, the
revocation is mandatory on conviction
or other findings that confirm the
charge. (Pleas of ‘‘nolo contendere’’ are
considered equivalent to guilty pleas).
(i) Revocations are effective as of the
date of conviction or other findings that
confirm the charges. Test refusal
revocations will be in addition to any
other revocation incurred during a
hearing. Hearing authority will
determine if revocations for multiple
offenses will run consecutively or
concurrently taking into consideration if
offenses occurred on same occasion or
different times, dates. The exception is
that test refusal will be one year
automatic revocation in addition to any
other suspension.
(ii) The notice that revocation is
automatic may be placed in the
suspension letter. If it does not appear
in the suspension letter, a separate letter
must be sent and revocation is not
effective until receipt of the written
notice.
(iii) Revocations cancel any full or
restricted driving privileges that may
have been restored during suspension
and the resolution of the charges.
Requests for restoration of full driving
privileges are not authorized.
(11) The Army Vehicle Registration
System will be utilized to maintain
infractions by individuals on Army
installations.
§ 634.12 Army administrative actions
against intoxicated drivers.
Army commanders will take
appropriate action against intoxicated
drivers. These actions may include the
following:
(a) A written reprimand,
administrative in nature, will be issued
to active duty Soldiers in the cases
described in this paragraph. Any general
officer, and any officer frocked to the
grade of brigadier general, may issue
this reprimand. Filing of the reprimand
will be in accordance with the
provisions of AR 600–37.
(1) Conviction by courts-martial or
civilian court or imposition of nonjudicial punishment for an offense of
drunk or impaired driving either on or
off the installation.
(2) Refusal to take or failure to
complete a lawfully requested test to
measure alcohol or drug content of the
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blood, breath, or urine, either on or off
the installation, when there is
reasonable belief of driving under the
influence of alcohol or drugs.
(3) Driving or being in physical
control of a motor vehicle or watercraft
(as described above) on post when the
blood alcohol content is 0.08 percent or
higher, irrespective of other charges, or
either on or off post when the blood
alcohol content is in violation of the law
of the State involved.
(4) Driving, or being in physical
control of a motor vehicle, either on or
off the installation, when lawfully
conducted chemical tests reflect the
presence of illegal drugs.
(b) Review by the commander of the
service records of active duty soldiers
apprehended for offenses described in
paragraph (a) of this section to
determine if the following action(s)
should be taken—
(1) Administrative reduction per AR
600–8–19; or
(2) Bar to reenlistment per AR 601–
280; or
(3) Administrative separation per AR
635–200.
(c) Federal civilian employees may be
subject to administrative actions in
accordance with 5 CFR part 752.
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§ 634.13 Alcohol and drug abuse
programs.
(a) Commanders will refer military
personnel suspected of drug or alcohol
abuse for evaluation in the following
circumstances:
(1) Behavior indicative of alcohol or
drug abuse.
(2) Continued inability to drive a
motor vehicle safely because of alcohol
or drug abuse.
(b) The commander will ensure
military personnel are referred to the
installation alcohol and drug abuse
program or other comparable facilities
when they are convicted of, or receive
an official administrative action for, any
offense involving driving under the
influence. A first offender may be
referred to treatment if evidence of
substance abuse exists in addition to the
offense of intoxicated driving. The
provisions of this paragraph do not limit
the commander’s prerogatives
concerning other actions that may be
taken against an offender under separate
Service/Agency polices (Army, see AR
600–85. Marine Corps, see MCO
P1700.24B).
(c) Active duty Army personnel
apprehended for drunk driving, on or
off the installation, will be referred to
the local Army Substance Abuse
Program (ASAP) for evaluation within
14 calendar days to determine if the
person is dependent on alcohol or other
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drugs which will result in enrollment in
treatment in accordance with AR 600–
85. A copy of all reports on military
personnel and DOD civilian employees
apprehended for intoxicated driving
will be forwarded to the installation
alcohol and drug abuse facility.
(d) Active duty Navy personnel
apprehended for drunk driving on or off
the installation will be screened by the
respective SARP facility within 14
calendar days to determine if the
individual is dependent on alcohol or
other drugs. Active duty Marines
apprehended for intoxicated driving, on
or off the installation, will be referred to
interview by a Level II substance abuse
counselor within 14 calendar days for
evaluation and determination of the
appropriate level of treatment required.
Subsequent to this evaluation, the
Marine will be assigned to the
appropriate treatment programs as
prescribed by MCO P1700.24B.
(e) The Services/Agencies may
develop preventive treatment and
rehabilitative programs for civilian
employees with alcohol-related
problems.
(f) Army supervisors of civilian
employees apprehended for intoxicated
driving will advise employees of ASAP
services available. Civilian employees
apprehended for intoxicated driving
while on duty will be referred to the
ASAP or comparable facility for
evaluation in accordance with AR 600–
85. Army commanders will ensure that
sponsors encourage family members
apprehended for drunk driving seek
ASAP evaluation and assistance.
(g) Navy and DLA civilian personnel
charged with intoxicated driving will be
referred to the Civilian Employee
Assistance Program in accordance with
5 CFR part 792. Such referral does not
exempt the employee from appropriate
administrative or disciplinary actions
under civilian personnel regulations.
(h) Marine Corps civilian employees
charged with intoxicated driving, on or
off the installation, will be referred to
the Employee Assistance Program as
prescribed by MCO P1700.24B. Marine
family members charged with
intoxicated driving, on or off the
installation, will be provided assistance
as addressed in MCO P1700.24B. Such
referral and assistance does not exempt
the individual from appropriate
administrative or disciplinary action
under current civilian personnel
regulations or State laws.
(i) For the Army, DLA, and the Marine
Corps, installation driving privileges of
any person who refuses to submit to, or
fails to complete, chemical testing for
blood-alcohol content when
apprehended for intoxicated driving, or
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convicted of intoxicated driving, will
not be reinstated unless the person
successfully completes either an alcohol
education or treatment program
sponsored by the installation, state,
county, or municipality, or other
program evaluated as acceptable by the
installation commander.
(j) Active duty Air Force personnel
apprehended for drunk driving, on or
off the installation, will be referred by
their respective chain of command to
the Air Force Substance Abuse office for
evaluation in accordance with AFI 44–
121/Alcohol Drug Abuse & Treatment
Program, and local policies within
seven days.
(k) Local installation commanders
will determine if active duty Air Force
personnel involved in any alcohol
incident will immediately be subjected
to a urinalysis for drug content. If
consent is not given for the test, a
command-directed test will be
administered in accordance with local
policies.
§ 634.14 Restoration of driving privileges
upon acquittal of intoxicated driving.
The suspension of driving privileges
for military and civilian personnel shall
be restored if a final disposition
indicates a finding of not guilty, charges
are dismissed or reduced to an offense
not amounting to intoxicated driving, or
where an equivalent determination is
made in a non-judicial proceeding. The
following are exceptions to the rule in
which suspensions will continue to be
enforced.
(a) The preliminary suspension was
based on refusal to take a BAC test.
(b) The preliminary suspension
resulted from a valid BAC test, (unless
disposition of the charges was based on
invalidity of the BAC test). In the case
of a valid BAC test, the suspension will
continue, pending completion of a
hearing as specified in § 634.11. In such
instances, the individual will be
notified in writing that the suspension
will continue and of the opportunity to
request a hearing within 14 calendar
days.
(1) At the hearing, the arrest report,
the commander’s report of official
disposition, information presented by
the individual, and such other
information as the hearing officer may
deem appropriate will be considered.
(2) If the hearing officer determines by
a preponderance of evidence that the
individual was engaged in intoxicated
driving, the revocation will be for 1 year
from the date of the original preliminary
suspension.
(c) The person was driving or in
physical control of a motor vehicle
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while under a preliminary suspension
or revocation.
(d) An administrative determination
has been made by the state or host
nation licensing authority to suspend or
revoke driving privileges.
(e) The individual has failed to
complete a formally directed substance
abuse or driver’s training program.
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§ 634.15 Restricted driving privileges or
probation.
(a) For the Navy, Air Force, Marine
Corps, and DLA, the installation
commander, or his or her designee may
modify a suspension or revocation of
driving privileges in certain cases per
paragraph (d) of this section.
(b) Army requests for restricted
driving privileges subsequent to
suspension or revocation of installation
driving privileges will be referred to the
installation commander or designee,
except for intoxicated driving cases,
which must be referred to the General
Court Martial Convening Authority.
Withdrawal of restricted driving
privileges is within the installation
commander’s discretion.
(c) Probation or restricted driving
privileges will not be granted to any
person whose driver license or right to
operate motor vehicles is under
suspension or revocation by a state,
Federal, or host nation licensing
authority. Prior to application for
probation or restricted driving
privileges, a state, Federal, or host
nation driver’s license or right to
operate motor vehicles must be
reinstated. The burden of proof for
reinstatement of driving privileges lies
with the person applying for probation
or restricted driving privileges.
Revocations for test refusals shall
remain.
(d) The installation commander or
designee may grant restricted driving
privileges or probation on a case-by-case
basis provided the person’s state or host
nation driver’s license or right to
operate motor vehicles remains valid to
accommodate any of the following
reasons:
(1) Mission requirements.
(2) Unusual personal or family
hardships.
(3) Delays exceeding 90 days, not
attributed to the person concerned, in
the formal disposition of an
apprehension or charges that are the
basis for any type of suspension or
revocation.
(4) When there is no reasonably
available alternate means of
transportation to officially assigned
duties. In this instance, a limited
exception can be granted for the sole
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purpose of driving directly to and from
the place of duty.
(e) The terms and limitations on a
restricted driving privilege (for example,
authorization to drive to and from place
of employment or duty, or selected
installation facilities such as hospital,
commissary, and or other facilities) will
be specified in writing and provided to
the individual concerned. Persons
found in violation of the restricted
privilege are subject to revocation action
as prescribed in § 634.9.
(f) The conditions and terms of
probation will be specified in writing
and provided to the individual
concerned. The original suspension or
revocation term in its entirety may be
activated to commence from the date of
the violation of probation. In addition,
separate action may be initiated based
on the commission of any traffic,
criminal, or military offense that
constitutes a probation violation.
(g) DOD employees and contractors,
who can demonstrate that suspension or
revocation of installation driving
privileges would constructively remove
them from employment, may be given a
limiting suspension/revocation that
restricts driving on the installation or
activity (or in the overseas command) to
the most direct route to and from their
respective work sites (5 U.S.C.
2302(b)(10)). This is not to be construed
as limiting the commander from
suspension or revocation of on-duty
driving privileges or seizure of Optional
Form (OF) 346, U.S. Government Motor
Vehicle Operator’s Identification Card
even if this action would constructively
remove a person from employment in
those instances in which the person’s
duty requires driving from place to
place on the installation.
§ 634.16
Reciprocal State-Military action.
(a) Commanders will recognize the
interests of the states in matters of POV
administration and driver licensing.
Statutory authority may exist within
some states or host nations for
reciprocal suspension and revocation of
driving privileges. See subpart D of this
part for additional information on
exchanging and obtaining information
with civilian law enforcement agencies
concerning infractions by Armed
Service personnel off post. Installation
commanders will honor the reciprocal
authority and direct the installation law
enforcement officer to pursue
reciprocity with state or host nation
licensing authorities. Upon receipt of
written or other official law enforcement
communication relative to the
suspension/revocation of driving
privileges, the receiving installation will
terminate driving privileges as if
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violations occurred within its own
jurisdiction.
(b) When imposing a suspension or
revocation for an off-installation offense,
the effective date should be the same as
civil disposition, or the date that state
or host-nation driving privileges are
suspended or revoked. This effective
date can be retroactive.
(c) If statutory authority does not exist
within the state or host nation for formal
military reciprocity, the procedures
below will be adopted:
(1) Commanders will recognize
official documentation of suspensions/
revocations imposed by state or host
nation authorities. Administrative
actions (suspension/revocations, or if
recognized, point assessment) for
moving traffic violations off the
installation should not be less than
required for similar offenses on the
installation. When notified by state or
host nation authorities of a suspension
or revocation, the person’s OF 346 may
also be suspended.
(2) In CONUS locations, the host and
issuing state licensing authority will be
notified as soon as practical when a
person’s installation driving privileges
are suspended or revoked for any
period, and immediately for refusal to
submit to a lawful BAC test. The
notification will be sent to the
appropriate state DMV(s) per reciprocal
agreements. In the absence of electronic
communication technology, the
appropriate state DMV(s) will be
notified by official certified mail. The
notification will include the basis for
the suspension/revocation and the BAC
level if applicable.
(d) In OCONUS locations, installation
commanders must follow provisions of
the applicable Status of Forces
Agreement (SOFA), the law of the host
nation concerning reciprocal suspension
and revocation, and other international
agreements. To the extent an agreement
concerning reciprocity may be
permitted at a particular overseas
installation, the commander must have
prior authorization to negotiate and
conclude such an international
agreement in accordance with
applicable international agreements,
DODD 5530.3, International
Agreements, June 87, and other
individual Service instructions.
§ 634.17 Extensions of suspensions and
revocations.
(a) Driving in violation of a
suspension or revocation imposed
under this part will result in the original
period of suspension or revocation
being increased by two years. In
addition, administrative action may be
initiated based on the commission of
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any traffic, criminal, or military
offenses, for example, active duty
military personnel driving on the
installation in violation of a lawful
order.
(b) For each subsequent determination
within a five-year period that revocation
is authorized under § 634.9, military
personnel, DOD civilians, contractors
and NAF employees will be prohibited
from obtaining or using an OF 346 for
six months for each such incident. A
determination whether DOD civilian
personnel should be prohibited from
obtaining or using an OF 346 will be
made in accordance with the laws and
regulations applicable to civilian
personnel. This does not preclude a
commander from imposing such
prohibition for a first offense, or for a
longer period of time for a first or
subsequent offense, or for such other
reasons as may be authorized.
(c) Commanders may extend a
suspension or revocation of driving
privileges on personnel until
completion of an approved remedial
driver training course or alcohol or drug
counseling programs after proof is
provided.
(d) Commanders may extend a
suspension or revocation of driving
privileges on civilian personnel
convicted of intoxicated driving on the
installation until successful completion
of a state or installation approved
alcohol or drug rehabilitation program.
(e) For Navy personnel for good cause,
the appropriate authority may withdraw
the restricted driving privilege and
continue the suspension or revocation
period (for example, driver at fault in
the traffic accident, or driver cited for a
moving violation).
§ 634.18 Reinstatement of driving
privileges.
Reinstatement of driving privileges
shall be automatic, provided all
revocations applicable have expired,
proper proof of completion of remedial
driving course and/or substance abuse
counseling has been provided, and
reinstatement requirements of
individual’s home state and/or state the
individual may have been suspended in,
have been met.
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Subpart C—Motor Vehicle Registration
§ 634.19
Registration policy.
(a) Services may require motor vehicle
registration according to guidance in
this regulation and in policies of each
Service and DLA. A person who lives or
works on an installation or often uses
the facilities may be required to register
his or her vehicle. Where required,
individuals who access the installation
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for regular activities such as use of
medical facilities and regular recurring
activities on the installation should
register their vehicles according to a
standard operating procedure
established by the installation
commander. The person need not own
the vehicle to register it, but must have
a lease agreement, power of attorney, or
notarized statement from the owner of
the vehicle specifying the inclusive
dates for which permission to use the
vehicle has been granted.
(b) Vehicles intended for construction
and material handling, or used solely off
the road, are usually not registered as
motor vehicles. Installation
commanders may require registration of
off-road vehicles and bicycles under a
separate local system.
(c) Commanders can grant limited
temporary registration for up to 30 days,
pending permanent registration, or in
other circumstances for longer terms.
(d) DD Form 2220 vehicle decal. The
Department of Defense does not require
vehicles entering Department of Defense
installations to be registered via the DD
Form 2220 vehicle decal; however
installations may utilize DD Form 2220
for registration at the installation
commander’s discretion. All privately
owned vehicles (POVs) must continue
to be licensed, registered, inspected, and
insured in accordance with state and
local laws.
(e) Rental vehicles are considered
POVs for purposes of installation entry
and access control. The vehicle rental
contract will suffice as proper licensing,
registration and insurance for
installation access.
(f) Army Installation commanders
may establish local visitor identification
for individuals who will be on
installation for less than 30 days. The
local policy will provide for use of
temporary passes that establish a start
and end date for which the pass is valid.
Army installation commanders must
refer to AR 190–13, chapter 8, for
guidance concerning installation access
control (Air Force, see AFI 31–113).
Other Armed Services and DLA may
develop and issue visitor passes locally.
(g) The conditions in § 634.20 must be
met to operate a POV on an Army and
DLA Installation. Other Armed Services
that do not require registration will
enforce § 634.20 through traffic
enforcement actions. Additionally,
failure to comply with § 634.20 may
result in administrative suspension or
revocation of driving privileges.
§ 634.20 Privately Owned Vehicle
operation requirements.
Personnel seeking to register their
POVs on military installations within
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the United States or its territories and in
overseas areas will comply with the
following requirements. (Registration in
overseas commands may be modified in
accordance with international
agreements or military necessity.)
(a) Possess a valid state, overseas
command, host nation or international
drivers license (within appropriate
classification), supported by a DD Form
2-Series Identification Card, or other
appropriate identification for DOD
civilians, contractors and retirees.
(b) Possess a certificate of state
registration as required by the state in
which the vehicle is registered.
(c) Comply with the minimum
requirements of the automobile
insurance laws or regulations of the
state or host nation. In overseas
commands where host nation laws do
not require minimum personal injury
and property damage liability insurance,
the major overseas commander will set
reasonable liability insurance
requirements for registration and/or
operation of POVs within the confines
of military installations and areas where
the commander exercises jurisdiction.
Prior to implementation, insurance
requirements in host states or nations
should be formally coordinated with the
appropriate host agency.
(d) Satisfactorily complete a safety
and mechanical vehicle inspection by
the state or jurisdiction in which the
vehicle is licensed. If neither state nor
local jurisdiction requires a periodic
safety inspection, installation
commanders may require and conduct
an annual POV safety inspection;
however, inspection facilities must be
reasonably accessible to those requiring
use. Inspections will meet minimum
standards established by the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) in 49 CFR part 570. Lights,
turn signals, brake lights, horn, wipers,
and pollution control devices and
standards in areas where applicable,
should be included in the inspection.
Vehicles modified from factory
standards and determined unsafe may
be denied access and registration.
(e) Possess current proof of
compliance with local vehicle emission
inspection if required by the state, and
maintenance requirements.
(f) Vehicles that have been modified
in an unsafe manner, as determined by
an inspection that is consistent with the
standards in 49 CFR part 570, will be
denied registration.
§ 634.21
2220.
Department of Defense Form
(a) Use. The DD Form 2220 may be
used to identify registered POVs on
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps,
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and DLA installations or facilities. The
requirement to affix the DD Form 2220
to the front windshield or bumper of
registered vehicles is waived for general
officers and flag officers of all Armed
Services, Armed Service Secretaries,
political appointees, members of
Congress, and the diplomatic corps.
(1) Each Service and DLA will
procure its own forms and installation
and expiration tabs. For the Army, the
basic decal will be ordered through
publications channels and remain on
the vehicle until the registered owner
disposes of the vehicle, separates from
active duty or other conditions specified
in paragraph (a)(2) of this section. Air
Force, DLA, and Army retirees may
retain DD Form 2220. Service retirees
may be required to follow the same
registration procedures as active duty
personnel. Upon termination of
affiliation with the Service, the
registered owner or authorized operator
is responsible for removing the DD Form
2220 from the vehicle and surrender of
the decal to the issuing office. Service
installations requiring registration are
responsible for the costs of procuring
decals with the name of their
installation and related expiration tabs.
(2) Services and DLA, will require
removal of the DD Form 2220, and
installation and expiration tabs from
POVs by the owner prior to departure
from their current installation,
retirement, or separation from military
or Government affiliation, termination
of ownership, registration, liability
insurance, or other conditions further
identified by local policy.
(b) Specifications. (1) DD Form 2220
and installation and expiration tabs will
consist of international blue borders and
printing on a white background. Printer
information will include the following:
(i) Form title (Department of Defense
Registered Vehicle).
(ii) Alphanumeric individual form
identification number.
(iii) DOD seal.
(2) Name of the installation will be
specified on a separate tab abutting the
decal. Each Service or DLA may choose
optional color codes for the registrant.
Army and installations having vehicle
registration programs will use the
following standard color scheme for the
installation tab:
(i) Blue-officers.
(ii) Red-enlisted.
(iii) Green DA civilian employees
(including NAF employees).
(iv) Black-contractor personnel and
other civilians employed on the
installation. White will be used for
contract personnel on Air Force
installations.
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(3) An expiration tab identifying the
month and year (6–2004), the year
(2000) or simply ‘‘00’’ will be abutted to
right of the decal. For identification
purposes, the date of expiration will be
shown in bold block numbers on a
lighter contrasting background such as
traffic yellow, lime, or orange.
(4) DD Form 2220 and any adjoining
tabs will be theft resistant when applied
to glass, metal, painted, or rubberized
surfaces and manufactured so as to
obliterate or self destruct when removal
is attempted. Local policy guided by
state or host nation laws will specify the
exact placement of DD Form 2220.
(5) Services may issue military and
retired personnel grade insignia that
will be affixed on placards,
approximately five inches by eight
inches in size, and placed on the
driver’s side dashboard. Placards should
be removed from view when the vehicle
is not located on a military installation.
§ 634.22
Gold Star decals.
(a) For Army installations only, a
serial-numbered Gold Star vehicle
identification decal may be issued in
accordance with guidance from the
Army’s Office of the Assistant Chief of
Staff for Installation Management. The
decals may be obtained through Army
installation Survivor Outreach Services
and may serve as a temporary vehicle
registration in accordance with DoD
security standards.
(b) Gold Star decals issued to identify
Surviving Family Members of deceased
Soldiers may be used to identify POVs
and expedite processing for installation
access.
(c) Gold Star decals do not exempt
vehicles and passengers from DOD and
Army installation access screening
procedures.
(d) A physical and visual inspection
of ID cards shall be conducted by
security forces when required for
installation access.
§ 634.23 Termination or denial of
registration.
Installation commanders or their
designated representatives will
terminate POV registration or deny
initial registration under the following
conditions (decal and tabs will be
removed from the vehicle when
registration is terminated):
(a) The owner fails to comply with the
registration requirements.
(b) The owner sells or disposes of the
POV, is released from active duty,
separated from the Service, or
terminates civilian employment with a
military Service or DOD agency. Army
and Air Force personnel on a permanent
change of station will retain the DD
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78999
Form 2220 if the vehicle is moved to
their new duty station.
(c) The owner is other than an active
duty military or civilian employee and
discontinues regular operations of the
POV on the installation.
(d) The owner’s state, overseas
command, or host nation driver’s
license is suspended or revoked, or the
installation driving privilege is revoked.
Air Force does not require removal of
the DD Form 2220 when driving
privileges are suspended for an
individual. When vehicle registration is
terminated in conjunction with the
revocation of installation driving
privileges, the affected person must
apply to re-register the POV after the
revocation expires. Registration should
not be terminated if other family
members having installation driving
privileges require use of the vehicle.
§ 634.24 Specified consent to
impoundment.
Personnel registering POVs on DOD
installations must consent to the
impoundment policy. POV registration
forms will contain or have appended to
them a certificate with the following
statement: ‘‘I am aware that (insert
number and title of separate Service or
DLA directive) and the installation
traffic code provide for the removal and
temporary impoundment of privately
owned motor vehicles that are either
parked illegally, or for unreasonable
periods, interfering with military
operations, creating a safety hazard,
disabled by accident, left unattended in
a restricted or control area, or
abandoned. I agree to reimburse the
United States for the cost of towing and
storage should my motor vehicle(s),
because of such circumstances, be
removed and impounded.’’
Subpart D—Traffic Supervision
§ 634.25
Traffic planning and codes.
(a) Safe and efficient movement of
traffic on an installation requires traffic
supervision. A traffic supervision
program includes traffic circulation
planning and control of motor vehicle
traffic; publication and enforcement of
traffic laws and regulations; and
investigation of motor vehicle accidents.
(b) Installation commanders will
develop traffic circulation plans that
provide for the safest and most efficient
use of primary and secondary roads.
Circulation planning should be a major
part of all long-range master planning at
installations. The traffic circulation plan
is developed by the installation law
enforcement officer, engineer, safety
officer, and other concerned staff
agencies. Highway engineering
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representatives from adjacent civil
communities must be consulted to
ensure the installation plan is
compatible with the current and future
circulation plan of the community. The
plan should include the following:
(1) Normal and peak load routing
based on traffic control studies.
(2) Effective control of traffic using
planned direction, including measures
for special events and adverse road or
weather conditions.
(3) Point control at congested
locations by law enforcement personnel
or designated traffic directors or
wardens, including trained schoolcrossing guards.
(4) Use of traffic control signs and
devices.
(5) Efficient use of available parking
facilities.
(6) Efficient use of mass
transportation.
(c) Traffic control studies will provide
factual data on existing roads, traffic
density and flow patterns, and points of
congestion. The installation law
enforcement officer and traffic engineer
usually conduct coordinated traffic
control studies to obtain the data.
Accurate data will help determine major
and minor routes, location of traffic
control devices, and conditions
requiring engineering or enforcement
services.
(d) The (Military) Surface Deployment
and Distribution Command
Transportation Engineering Agency
(SDDCTEA) will help installation
commanders solve complex highway
traffic engineering problems. SDDCTEA
traffic engineering services include—
(1) Traffic studies of limited areas and
situations.
(2) Complete studies of traffic
operations of entire installations. (This
can include long-range planning for
future development of installation
roads, public highways, and related
facilities.)
(3) Assistance in complying with
established traffic engineering
standards.
(e) Installation commanders should
submit requests for traffic engineering
services in accordance with applicable
service or agency directives.
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§ 634.26
Installation traffic codes.
(a) Installation or activity
commanders will establish a traffic code
for operation of motor vehicles on the
installation. Commanders in overseas
areas will establish a traffic code, under
provisions of this Part, to the extent
military authority is empowered to
regulate traffic on the installation under
the applicable SOFA. Traffic codes will
contain the rules of the road (parking
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violations, towing instructions, safety
equipment, and other key provisions).
These codes will, where possible,
conform to the code of the State or host
nation in which the installation is
located. In addition, the development
and publication of installation traffic
codes will be based on the following:
(1) State Highway Safety Program
Standards (23 U.S.C. 402).
(2) Applicable portions of the
Uniform Vehicle Code and Model
Traffic Ordinance published by the
National Committee on Uniform Traffic
Laws and Ordinances.
(b) The installation traffic code will
contain policy and procedures for the
towing, searching, impounding, and
inventorying of POVs. These provisions
should be well publicized and contain
the following:
(1) Specific violations and conditions
under which the POV will be
impounded and towed.
(2) Procedures to immediately notify
the vehicle owner.
(3) Procedures for towing and storing
impounded vehicles.
(4) Actions to dispose of the vehicle
after lawful impoundment.
(5) Violators are responsible for all
costs of towing, storage and impounding
of vehicles for other than evidentiary
reasons.
(c) Installation traffic codes will also
contain the provisions discussed as
follows: (Army users see AR 385–10).
(1) Motorcycles and mopeds. For
motorcycles and other self-propelled,
open, two-wheel, three-wheel, and fourwheel vehicles powered by a
motorcycle-type engine, the following
traffic rules apply:
(i) Headlights will be on at all times
when in operation.
(ii) A rear view mirror will be
attached to each side of the handlebars.
(iii) Approved protective helmets
(DOT compliance), eye protection,
sturdy over-the-ankle footwear that
affords protection for the feet and
ankles, and protective clothing
including long-sleeved shirt or jacket,
long trousers, and full-fingered gloves or
mittens made from leather or other
abrasion-resistant material must be
worn by operators and passengers when
in operation. Motorcycle jackets and
pants constructed of abrasion-resistant
materials such as leather, Kevlar®, or
Cordura® and containing impactabsorbing padding are strongly
encouraged. Riders are encouraged to
select PPE that incorporates fluorescent
colors and retro-reflective material.
(2) Restraint systems. (i) Restraint
systems (seat belts) will be worn by all
operators and passengers of U.S.
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Government vehicles on or off the
installation.
(ii) Restraint systems will be worn by
all civilian personnel (including family
members, guests, and visitors) driving or
riding in a POV on the installation.
(iii) Restraint systems will be worn by
all military service members and
Reserve Component members on active
Federal service driving or riding in a
POV whether on or off the installation.
(iv) Each occupant riding in a
passenger motor vehicle who is under
eight years of age, weighs less than 65
pounds and is less than four feet, nine
inches in height must be secured in an
age-appropriate child restraint.
(v) Restraint systems are required only
in vehicles manufactured after model
year 1966.
(3) Driver Distractions. Vehicle
operators on a DoD installation and
operators of Government owned
vehicles, as well as Federal employees
(including service members) operating a
POV on official government business or
using electronic equipment provided by
the Government while driving, will not
use a personal wireless communication
device, including for text messaging or
any other form of electronic data
retrieval or electronic data
communication, unless the vehicle is
safely parked or unless they are using a
hands-free device. The wearing of any
other portable headphones, earphones,
or other listening devices (except for
hands–free use of cellular phones) while
operating a motor vehicle is prohibited.
Use of those devices impairs driving
and masks or prevents recognition of
emergency signals, alarms,
announcements, the approach of
vehicles, and human speech. The DOD
component safety guidance should note
the potential for driver distractions such
as eating and drinking, operating radios,
CD players, global positioning
equipment, and so on. Whenever
possible this should only be done when
the vehicle is safely parked.
(d) Only administrative actions
(reprimand, assessment of points, loss of
on-post driving privileges, or other
actions) will be initiated against service
members for off-post violations of the
installation traffic code.
(e) In States where traffic law
violations are State criminal offenses,
such laws are made applicable under
the provisions of 18 U.S.C. 13 to
military installations having concurrent
or exclusive Federal jurisdiction.
(f) In those States where violations of
traffic law are not considered criminal
offenses and cannot be assimilated
under 18 U.S.C., DODD 5525.4,
enclosure 1 expressly adopts the
vehicular and pedestrian traffic laws of
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such States and makes these laws
applicable to military installations
having concurrent or exclusive Federal
jurisdiction. It also delegates authority
to installation commanders to establish
additional vehicular and pedestrian
traffic rules and regulations for their
installations. Persons found guilty of
violating the vehicular and pedestrian
traffic laws made applicable on the
installation under provisions of that
directive are subject to a fine as
determined by the local magistrate or
imprisonment for not more than 30
days, or both, for each violation. In
those States where traffic laws cannot be
assimilated, an extract copy of this
paragraph (f) and a copy of the
delegation memorandum in DODD
5525.4, enclosure 1, will be posted in a
prominent place accessible to persons
assigned, living, or working on the
installation.
(g) In those States where violations of
traffic laws cannot be assimilated
because the Federal Government’s
jurisdictional authority on the
installation or parts of the installation is
only proprietary, neither 18 U.S.C. 13
nor the delegation memorandum in
DoDD 5525.4, enclosure 1, will permit
enforcement of the State’s traffic laws in
Federal courts. Law enforcement
authorities on those military
installations must rely on either
administrative sanctions related to the
installation driving privilege or
enforcement of traffic laws by State law
enforcement authorities.
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§ 634.27 Traffic law enforcement
principles.
(a) Traffic law enforcement should
motivate drivers to operate vehicles
safely within traffic laws and
regulations and maintain an effective
and efficient flow of traffic. Effective
enforcement should emphasize
voluntary compliance by drivers and
can be achieved by the following
actions:
(1) Publishing a realistic traffic code
well known by all personnel.
(2) Adopting standard signs,
markings, and signals in accordance
with NHSPS and the Manual on
Uniform Traffic Control Devices for
Streets and Highways.
(3) Ensuring enforcement personnel
establish courteous, personal contact
with drivers and act promptly when
driving behavior is improper or a
defective vehicle is observed in
operation.
(4) Maintaining an aggressive program
to detect and apprehend persons who
drive while privileges are suspended or
revoked.
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(5) Using sound discretion and
judgment in deciding when to
apprehend, issue citations, or warn the
offender.
(b) Selective enforcement will be used
when practical. Selective enforcement
deters traffic violations and reduces
accidents by the presence or suggested
presence of law enforcement personnel
at places where violations, congestion,
or accidents frequently occur. Selective
enforcement applies proper enforcement
measures to traffic congestion and
focuses on selected time periods,
conditions, and violations that cause
accidents. Law enforcement personnel
use selective enforcement because that
practice is the most effective use of
resources.
(c) Enforcement activities against
intoxicated driving will include—
(1) Detecting, apprehending, and
testing persons suspected of driving
under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
(2) Training law enforcement
personnel in special enforcement
techniques.
(3) Enforcing blood-alcohol
concentration standards. (See § 634.35).
(4) Denying installation driving
privileges to persons whose use of
alcohol or other drugs prevents safe
operation of a motor vehicle.
(d) Installation officials will formally
evaluate traffic enforcement on a regular
basis. That evaluation will examine
procedures to determine if the following
elements of the program are effective in
reducing traffic accidents and deaths:
(1) Selective enforcement measures;
(2) Suspension and revocation
actions; and
(3) Chemical breath-testing programs.
§ 635.28
Speed-measuring devices.
Speed-measuring devices will be used
in traffic control studies and
enforcement programs. Signs may be
posted to indicate speed-measuring
devices are being used.
(a) Equipment purchases. Installations
will ensure operators attend an
appropriate training program for the
equipment in use.
(b) Training and certification
standards. (1) The commander of each
installation using traffic radar will
ensure that personnel selected as
operators of such devices meet training
and certification requirements
prescribed by the State (or SOFA) in
which the installation is located.
Specific information on course dates,
costs, and prerequisites for attending
may be obtained by contacting the State
agency responsible for police traffic
radar training.
(2) Installation commanders located
in States or overseas areas where no
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formal training program exists, or where
the military personnel are unable or
ineligible to participate in police traffic
radar training programs, may implement
their own training program or use a
selected civilian institution or
manufacturer’s course.
(3) The objective of the civilian or
manufacturer-sponsored course is to
improve the effectiveness of speed
enforcement through the proper and
efficient use of speed-measurement
radar. On successful completion, the
course graduate must be able to—
(i) Describe the association between
excessive speed and accidents, deaths,
and injuries, and describe the traffic
safety benefits of effective speed control.
(ii) Describe the basic principles of
radar speed measurement.
(iii) Identify and describe the
Service’s policy and procedures
affecting radar speed measurement and
speed enforcement.
(iv) Identify the specific radar
instrument used and describe the
instrument’s major components and
functions.
(v) Demonstrate basic skills in
checking calibration and operating the
specific radar instrument(s).
(vi) Demonstrate basic skills in
preparing and presenting records and
courtroom testimony relating to radar
speed measurement and enforcement.
(c) Recertification. Recertification of
operators will occur every three years,
or as prescribed by State law.
§ 634.29
Traffic accident investigation.
Installation law enforcement
personnel must make detailed
investigations of accidents described in
this section:
(a) Accidents involving Government
vehicles or Government property on the
installation involving a fatality, personal
injury, or estimated property damage in
the amount established by separate
Service/DLA policy. (Minimum damage
limits are: Army, $1,000; Air Force, as
specified by the installation
commander; Navy and Marine Corps,
$500.) The installation motor pool will
provide current estimates of the cost of
repairs. Investigations of off-installation
accidents involving Government
vehicles will be made in cooperation
with the civilian law enforcement
agency.
(b) POV accidents on the installation
involving a fatality, personal injury, or
when a POV is inoperable as a result of
an accident.
(c) Any accident prescribed within a
SOFA agreement.
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§ 634.30
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Traffic accident investigation
(a) Accidents requiring immediate
reports. The driver or owner of any
vehicle involved in an accident, as
described in § 634.29, on the
installation, must immediately notify
the installation law enforcement office.
The operator of any Government vehicle
involved in a similar accident off the
installation must immediately notify the
local civilian law enforcement agency
having jurisdiction, as well as law
enforcement personnel of the nearest
military installation.
(b) Investigation records. Installation
law enforcement officials will record
traffic accident investigations on
Service/DLA forms. Information will be
released according to Service/DLA
policy, the Privacy Act, and the
Freedom of Information Act.
(c) Army law enforcement officers.
These officers provide the Department
of the Army local Safety Office copies
of traffic accident investigation reports
pertaining to accidents investigated by
military police that resulted in a fatality,
personal injury, or estimated damage to
Government vehicles or property in
excess of $1,000.
(d) POV accidents not addressed in
§ 634.29. Guidance for reporting these
cases is provided as follows:
(1) Drivers or owners of POVs will be
required to submit a written report to
the installation law enforcement office
within 24 hours of an accident in the
following cases, with all information
listed in paragraph (d)(3) of this section:
(i) The accident occurs on the
installation.
(ii) The accident involves no personal
injury.
(iii) The accident involves only minor
damage to the POV and the vehicle can
be safely and normally driven from the
scene under its own power.
(2) Information in the written report
cannot be used in criminal proceedings
against the person submitting it unless
it was originally categorized a hit and
run and the violator is the person
submitting the report. Rights
advisement will be given prior to any
criminal traffic statements provided by
violators. Within the United States, the
installation law enforcement official
may require such reporting on Service
forms or forms of the State jurisdiction.
(3) Reports required in paragraph
(d)(1) of this section by the Army will
include the following about the
accident:
(i) Location, date, and time.
(ii) Identification of all drivers,
pedestrians, and passengers involved.
(iii) Identification of vehicles
involved.
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(iv) Speed and direction of travel of
each vehicle involved, including a
sketch of the collision and roadway
with street names and north arrow.
(v) Property damage involved.
(vi) Environmental conditions at the
time of the incident (weather, visibility,
road surface condition, and other
factors).
(vii) A narrative description of the
events and circumstances concerning
the accident.
§ 634.31 Use of traffic accident
investigation report data.
(a) Data derived from traffic accident
investigation reports and from vehicle
owner accident reports will be analyzed
to determine probable causes of
accidents. When frequent accidents
occur at a location, the conditions at the
location and the types of accidents
(collision diagram) will be examined.
(b) Law enforcement personnel and
others who prepare traffic accident
investigation reports will document on
DA Form 3975, Military Police Report or
other Service equivalent, whether or not
seat restraint devices were being used at
the time of the accident.
(c) When accidents warrant, an
installation commander may establish a
traffic accident review board. The board
will consist of law enforcement,
engineer, safety, medical, and legal
personnel. The board will determine
principal factors leading to the accident
and recommend measures to reduce the
number and severity of accidents on and
off the installation. (The Air Force will
use Traffic Safety Coordinating Groups.
The Navy will use Traffic Safety
Councils per OPNAVINST 5100.12
Series).
(d) Data will be shared with the
installation legal, engineer, safety, and
transportation officers. The data will be
used to inform and educate drivers and
to conduct traffic engineering studies.
(e) Army traffic accident investigation
reports will be provided to Army
Centralized Accident Investigation of
Ground Accidents (CAIG) boards on
request. The CAIG boards are under the
control of the Commander, U.S. Army
Safety Center, Fort Rucker, AL 36362–
5363. These boards investigate Class A,
on-duty, non-POV accidents and other
selected accidents Army-wide (See AR
385–40). Local commanders provide
additional board members as required to
complete a timely and accurate
investigation. Normally, additional
board members are senior equipment
operators, maintenance officers, and
medical officers. However, specific
qualifications of the additional board
members may be dictated by the nature
of the accident.
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(f) The CAIG program is not intended
to interfere with, impede, or delay law
enforcement agencies in the execution
of regulatory responsibilities that apply
to the investigation of accidents for a
determination of criminal intent or
criminal acts. Criminal investigations
have priority.
(g) Army law enforcement agencies
will maintain close liaison and
cooperation with CAIG boards. Such
cooperation, particularly with respect to
interviews of victims and witnesses and
in collection and preservation of
physical evidence, should support both
the CAIG and law enforcement
collateral investigations.
§ 634.32
Parking.
(a) The most efficient use of existing
on- and off-street parking space should
be stressed on a non-reserved (firstcome, first-served) basis.
(b) Reserved parking facilities should
be designated as parking by permit or
numerically by category of eligible
parkers. Designation of parking spaces
by name, grade, rank, or title should be
avoided.
(c) Illegal parking contributes to
congestion and slows traffic flow on an
installation. Strong enforcement of
parking restrictions results in better use
of available parking facilities and
eliminates conditions causing traffic
accidents.
(d) The ‘‘Denver boot’’ device is
authorized for use as a technique to
assist in the enforcement of parking
violations where immobilization of the
POV is necessary for safety. Under no
circumstances should the device be
used to punish or ‘‘teach a lesson’’ to
violators. Booting should not be used if
other reasonably effective but less
restrictive means of enforcement (such
as warnings, ticketing, reprimands,
revocations, or suspensions of on-post
driving privileges) are available.
Procedures for booting must be
developed as follows:
(1) Local standing operating
procedures (SOPs) must be developed to
control the discretion of enforcers and
limit booting to specific offenses. SOPs
should focus on specific reasons for
booting, such as immobilization of
unsafe, uninspected, or unregistered
vehicles or compelling the presence of
repeat offenders. All parking violations
must be clearly outlined in the
installation traffic code.
(2) Drivers should be placed on notice
that particular violations or multiple
violations may result in booting. Also,
drivers must be provided with a prompt
hearing and an opportunity to obtain the
release of their property.
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(3) To limit liability, drivers must be
warned when a boot is attached to their
vehicle and instructed how to have the
boot removed without damaging the
vehicle.
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§ 634.33
Traffic violation reports.
(a) Most traffic violations occurring on
DOD installations (within the UNITED
STATES or its territories) should be
referred to the proper U.S. Magistrate.
(Army, see AR 190–45; DLA, see DLA
One Book Process Chapter, Criminal
Offenses and U.S. Federal Court
Procedures; and Air Force, see AFI 51–
905). However, violations are not
referred when—
(1) The operator is driving a
Government vehicle at the time of the
violation.
(2) A Federal Magistrate is either not
available or lacks jurisdiction to hear
the matter because the violation
occurred in an area where the Federal
Government has only proprietary
legislative jurisdiction.
(3) Mission requirements make
referral of offenders impractical.
(4) A U.S. Magistrate is available but
the accused refuses to consent to the
jurisdiction of the court and the U.S.
Attorney refuses to process the case
before a U.S. District Court. For the
Navy, DUI and driving under the
influence of drugs cases will be referred
to the Federal Magistrate.
(b) Installation commanders will
establish administrative procedures for
processing traffic violations.
(1) All traffic violators on military
installations will be issued either a DD
Form 1408 (Armed Forces Traffic
Ticket) or a Central Violations Bureau
(CVB) United States District Court
Violation Notice (DCVN), as
appropriate. Unless specified otherwise
by separate Service/DLA policy, only
on-duty law enforcement personnel
(including game wardens) designated by
the installation law enforcement officer
may issue these forms. Air Force
individuals certified under the Parking
Traffic Warden Program may issue DD
Form 1408 in areas under their control.
(2) A copy of all reports on military
personnel and DOD civilian employees
apprehended for intoxicated driving
will be forwarded to the installation
alcohol and drug abuse facility.
(c) Installation commanders will
establish procedures used for disposing
of traffic violation cases through
administrative or judicial action
consistent with the Uniform Code of
Military Justice (UCMJ) and Federal law.
(d) The CVB will be used to refer
violations of State traffic laws made
applicable to the installation
(Assimilative Crimes Act (18 U.S.C. 13)
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and the delegation memorandum in
DoDD 5525.4, enclosure 1, and other
violations of Federal law) to the U.S.
Magistrate. (Army users, see AR 190–
45.)
(1) A copy of DD Form 1805 and any
traffic violation reports on military
personnel and DOD civilian employees
will be forwarded to the commander or
supervisor of the violator. DA form 3975
may be use to forward the report.
(2) Detailed instructions for properly
completing the CVB are contained in
separate Service policy directives.
(3) The assimilation of State traffic
laws as Federal offenses should be
identified by a specific State code
reference in the CODE SECTION block
of the CVB (or in a complaint filed with
the U.S. Magistrate).
(4) The Statement of Probable Cause
on the CVB will be used according to
local staff judge advocate and U.S.
Magistrate court policy. The Statement
of Probable Cause is required by the
Federal misdemeanor rules to support
the issuance of a summons or arrest
warrant.
(5) For cases referred to U.S.
Magistrates, normal distribution of the
CVB will be as follows:
(i) The installation law enforcement
official will forward copy 1 (white) and
copy 2 (yellow) to the U.S. District
Court (Central Violation Bureau).
(ii) The installation law enforcement
office will file copy 3 (pink).
(iii) Law enforcement personnel will
provide copy 4 (envelope) to the
violator.
(e) When DD Form 1408 is used, one
copy (including written warnings) will
be forwarded through command
channels to the service member’s
commander, to the commander of the
military family member’s sponsor, or to
the civilian’s supervisor or employer as
the installation commander may
establish.
(1) Previous traffic violations
committed by the offender and points
assessed may be shown.
(2) For violations that require a report
of action taken, the DD Form 1408 will
be returned to the office of record
through the reviewing authority as the
installation commander may establish.
(3) When the report is received by the
office of record, that office will enter the
action on the violator’s driving record.
79003
(2) Prepare DD Form 1920 (Alcohol
Influence Report).
(3) Perform the three field tests of the
improved sobriety testing techniques
(§ 634.36[b]).
(4) Determine when a person appears
intoxicated but is actually physically or
mentally ill and requires prompt
medical attention.
(5) Understand the operation of
breath-testing devices.
(b) Each installation using breathtesting devices will ensure that
operators of these devices—
(1) Are chosen for integrity, maturity,
and sound judgment.
(2) Meet certification requirements of
the State where the installation is
located.
(c) Installations located in States or
overseas areas having a formal breathtesting and certification program should
ensure operators attend that training.
(d) Installations located in States or
overseas areas with no formal training
program will train personnel at courses
offered by selected civilian institutions
or manufacturers of the equipment.
(e) Operators must maintain
proficiency through refresher training
every 18 months or as required by the
State.
§ 634.35 Blood alcohol concentration
standards.
(a) Administrative revocation of
driving privileges and other
enforcement measures will be applied
uniformly to offenders driving under the
influence of alcohol or drugs. When a
person is tested under the implied
consent provisions of § 634.8, the results
of the test will be evaluated as follows:
(1) If the percentage is 0.05 but less
than 0.08, presume the person may be
impaired. This standard may be
considered with other competent
evidence in determining whether the
person was under the influence of
alcohol.
(2) If the percentage is 0.08 or more,
or if tests reflect the presence of illegal
drugs, the person was driving while
intoxicated.
(b) Percentages in paragraph (a) of this
section are percent of weight by volume
of alcohol in the blood based on grams
of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood.
These presumptions will be considered
with other evidence in determining
intoxication.
§ 634.34 Training of law enforcement
personnel.
§ 634.36 Chemical testing policies and
procedures.
(a) As a minimum, installation law
enforcement personnel will be trained
to do the following:
(1) Recognize signs of alcohol and
other drug impairment in persons
operating motor vehicles.
(a) Validity of chemical testing.
Results of chemical testing are valid
under this part only under the following
circumstances:
(1) Blood, urine, or other bodily
substances are tested using generally
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accepted scientific and medical
methods and standards.
(2) Breath tests are administered by
qualified personnel (§ 634.33).
(3) An evidential breath-testing device
approved by the State or host nation is
used. For Army, Air Force, and Marine
Corps, the device must also be listed on
the NHTSA ‘‘Conforming Products List
of Evidential Breath Measurement
Devices’’ (77 FR 35747, and subsequent
updates that NHTSA may publish
periodically in the Federal Register).
The most current NHTSA list may be
found by searching the Federal Register
Web site (https://www.federalregister.
gov/articles/search?conditions%5Bterm
%5D=%22Conforming+Products+List+
of+Evidential+Breath+Measurement+
Devices%22).
(4) Procedures established by the
State or host nation or as prescribed in
paragraph (b) of this section are
followed.
(b) Breath-testing device operational
procedures. If the State or host nation
has not established procedures for use
of breath-testing devices, the following
procedures will apply:
(1) Screening breath-testing devices
will be used—
(i) During the initial traffic stop as a
field sobriety testing technique, along
with other field sobriety testing
techniques, to determine if further
testing is needed on an evidential
breath-testing device.
(ii) According to manufacture
operating instructions. (For Army, Air
Force, and Marine Corps, the screening
breath-testing device must also be listed
on the NHTSA ‘‘Conforming Products
List of Evidential Breath Measurement
Devices’’ (see paragraph (a)(3) of this
section).
(2) Evidential breath-testing devices
will be used as follows:
(i) Observe the person to be tested for
at least 15 minutes before collecting the
breath specimen. During this time, the
person must not drink alcoholic
beverages or other fluids, eat, smoke,
chew tobacco/gum, or ingest any
substance.
(ii) Verify calibration and proper
operation of the instrument by using a
control sample immediately before the
test.
(iii) Comply with operational
procedures in the manufacturer’s
current instruction manual.
(iv) Perform preventive maintenance
as required by the instruction manual.
(c) Chemical tests of personnel
involved in fatal accidents. (1)
Installation medical authorities will
immediately notify the installation law
enforcement officer of—
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(i) The death of any person involved
in a motor vehicle accident.
(ii) The circumstances surrounding
such an accident, based on information
available at the time of admission or
receipt of the body of the victim.
(2) Medical authorities will examine
the bodies of those persons killed in a
motor vehicle accident to include
drivers, passengers, and pedestrians
subject to military jurisdiction. They
will also examine the bodies of family
members, who are 16 years of age or
older, if the sponsors give their consent.
Tests for the presence and concentration
of alcohol or other drugs in the person’s
blood, bodily fluids, or tissues will be
made as soon as possible and where
practical within eight hours of death.
The test results will be included in the
medical reports.
(3) As provided by law and medical
conditions permitting, a blood or breath
sample will be obtained from any
surviving operator whose vehicle is
involved in a fatal accident.
§ 634.37 Detection, apprehension, and
testing of intoxicated drivers.
(a) Law enforcement personnel
usually detect drivers under the
influence of alcohol or other drugs by
observing unusual or abnormal driving
behavior. Drivers showing such
behavior will be stopped immediately.
The cause of the unusual driving
behavior will be determined, and proper
enforcement action will be taken.
(b) When a law enforcement officer
reasonably concludes that the
individual driving or in control of the
vehicle is impaired, field sobriety tests
should be conducted on the individual.
The DD Form 1920 may be used by law
enforcement agencies in examining,
interpreting, and recording results of
such tests. Law enforcement personnel
should use the Standardized Field
Sobriety Test battery as sanctioned by
the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (consisting of three
tests: The horizontal gaze nystagmus
test, Walk and Turn, and One-Leg
Stand) and screening breath-testing
devices to conduct field sobriety tests.
§ 634.38 Voluntary breath and bodily fluid
testing based on implied consent.
(a) Implied consent policy is
explained in § 634.8.
(b) Tests may be administered only if
the following conditions are met:
(1) The person was lawfully stopped
while driving, operating, or in actual
physical control of a motor vehicle on
the installation.
(2) Reasonable suspicion exists to
believe that the person was driving
under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
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(3) A request was made to the person
to consent to the tests combined with a
warning that failure to voluntarily
submit to or complete a chemical test of
bodily fluids or breath will result in the
revocation of driving privileges.
(c) As stated in paragraphs (a) and (b)
of this section, the law enforcement
official relying on implied consent will
warn the person that driving privileges
will be revoked if the person fails to
voluntarily submit to or complete a
requested chemical test. The person
does not have the right to have an
attorney present before stating whether
he or she will submit to a test, or during
the actual test. Installation commanders
will prescribe the type or types of
chemical tests to be used. Testing will
follow policies and procedures in
§ 634.35. The results of chemical tests
conducted under the implied consent
provisions of this part may be used as
evidence in courts-martial, non-judicial
proceedings under Article 15 of the
UCMJ, administrative actions, and
civilian courts.
(d) Special rules exist for persons who
have hemophilia, other blood-clotting
disorders, or any medical or surgical
disorder being treated with an
anticoagulant. These persons—
(1) May refuse a blood extraction test
without penalty.
(2) Will not be administered a blood
extraction test to determine alcohol or
other drug concentration or presence
under this part.
(3) May be given breath or urine tests,
or both.
(e) If a person suspected of
intoxicated driving refuses to submit to
a chemical test, a test will not be
administered except as specified in
§ 634.39.
§ 634.39 Involuntary extraction of bodily
fluids in traffic cases.
(a) General. The procedures outlined
in this section pertain only to the
investigation of individuals stopped,
apprehended, or cited on a military
installation for any offense related to
driving a motor vehicle and for whom
probable cause exists to believe that
such individual is intoxicated.
Extractions of body fluids in furtherance
of other kinds of investigations are
governed by the Manual for CourtsMartial, United States, Military Rule of
Evidence 315 (2002) (MRE 315), and
regulatory rules concerning requesting
and granting authorizations for searches.
(1) Air Force policy on nonconsensual
extraction of blood samples is addressed
in AFI 44–102.
(2) Army and Marine Corps personnel
should not undertake the
nonconsensual extraction of body fluids
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for reasons other than a valid medical
purpose without first obtaining the
advice and concurrence of the
installation staff judge advocate or his or
her designee.
(3) DLA policy on nonconsensual
taking of blood samples is contained in
the DLA One Book Process Chapter,
Search and Seizure.
(b) Procedures. Involuntary bodily
fluid extraction must be based on valid
search and seizure authorization. An
individual subject to the UCMJ who
does not consent to chemical testing, as
described in § 634.37, may nonetheless
be subjected to an involuntary
extraction of bodily fluids, including
blood and urine, only in accordance
with the following procedures:
(1) An individual subject to the UCMJ
who was driving a motor vehicle and
suspected of being under the influence
of an intoxicant may be subjected to a
nonconsensual bodily fluid extraction to
test for the presence of intoxicants only
when there is a probable cause to
believe that such an individual was
driving or in control of a vehicle while
under the influence of an intoxicant.
(i) A search authorization by an
appropriate commander or military
magistrate obtained pursuant to the
Manual for Courts-Martial, United
States, Military Rule of Evidence 315
(2002) is required prior to such
nonconsensual extraction.
(ii) A search authorization is not
required under such circumstances
when there is a clear indication that
evidence of intoxication will be found
and there is reason to believe that the
delay necessary to obtain a search
authorization would result in the loss or
destruction of the evidence sought.
(iii) Because warrantless searches are
subject to close scrutiny by the courts,
obtaining an authorization is highly
preferable. Warrantless searches
generally should be conducted only
after coordination with the servicing
staff judge advocate or legal officer, and
attempts to obtain authorization from an
appropriate official prove unsuccessful
due to the unavailability of a
commander or military magistrate.
(2) If authorization from the military
magistrate or commander proves
unsuccessful due to the unavailability of
such officials, the commander of a
medical facility is empowered by the
Manual for Courts-Martial, United
States, Military Rule of Evidence 315
(2002), to authorize such extraction
from an individual located in the
facility at the time the authorization is
sought.
(i) Before authorizing the involuntary
extraction, the commander of the
medical facility should, if circumstances
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permit, coordinate with the servicing
staff judge advocate or legal officer.
(ii) The medical facility commander
authorizing the extraction under the
Manual for Courts-Martial, United
States, Military Rule of Evidence 315
(2002) need not be on duty as the
attending physician at the facility where
the extraction is to be performed and the
actual extraction may be accomplished
by other qualified medical personnel.
(iii) The authorizing official may
consider his or her own observations of
the individual in determining probable
cause.
(c) Role of medical personnel.
Authorization for the nonconsensual
extraction of blood samples for
evidentiary purposes by qualified
medical personnel is independent of,
and not limited by, provisions defining
medical care, such as the provision for
nonconsensual medical care pursuant to
AR 600–20, section IV. Extraction of
blood will be accomplished by qualified
medical personnel. (See the Manual for
Courts-Martial, United States, Military
Rule of Evidence 312[g] [2002]).
(1) In performing this duty, medical
personnel are expected to use only that
amount of force that is reasonable and
necessary to administer the extraction.
(2) Any force necessary to overcome
an individual’s resistance to the
extraction normally will be provided by
law enforcement personnel or by
personnel acting under orders from the
member’s unit commander.
(3) Life endangering force will not be
used in an attempt to effect
nonconsensual extractions.
(4) All law enforcement and medical
personnel will keep in mind the
possibility that the individual may
require medical attention for possible
disease or injury.
(d) Nonconsensual extractions of
blood will be done in a manner that will
not interfere with or delay proper
medical attention. Medical personnel
will determine the priority to be given
involuntary blood extractions when
other medical treatment is required.
(e) Use of Army medical treatment
facilities and personnel for blood
alcohol testing has no relevance to
whether or not the suspect is eligible for
military medical treatment. The medical
effort in such instances is in support of
a valid military mission (law
enforcement), not related to providing
medical treatment to an individual.
§ 634.40 Testing at the request of the
apprehended person.
(a) A person subject to tests under
§ 634.8 may request that an additional
test be done privately. The person may
choose a doctor, qualified technician,
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79005
chemist, registered nurse, or other
qualified person to do the test. The
person must pay the cost of the test. The
test must be a chemical test approved by
the State or host nation in an overseas
command.
(b) If the tests are requested, the
apprehended person is responsible for
making all arrangements.
(c) All tests will be completed without
unnecessary delay, within two hours of
detention if possible.
(d) If the suspect fails to or is unable
to obtain any additional tests, the results
of the tests that were done at the
direction of a law enforcement official
remain valid and may still be used to
support actions under separate Service
regulations, UCMJ, and the U.S.
Magistrate Court.
§ 634.41 General off installation traffic
activities.
In areas not under military control,
civil authorities enforce traffic laws.
Law enforcement authorities will
establish a system to exchange
information with civil authorities. Army
and Air Force installation law
enforcement authorities will establish a
system to exchange information with
civil authorities to enhance the chain of
command’s visibility of a soldier’s and
airman’s off post traffic violations.
These agreements will provide for the
assessment of traffic points based on
reports from state licensing authorities
involving Army military personnel. The
provisions of Subpart E of this part and
the VRS automated system provide for
the collection of off post traffic incident
reports and data. As provided in AR
190–45, civilian law enforcement
agencies are considered routine users of
Army law enforcement data and will be
granted access to data when available
from Army law enforcement systems of
records. Off-installation traffic activities
in overseas areas are governed by formal
agreements with the host nation
government. Procedures should be
established to process reports received
from civil authorities on serious traffic
violations, accidents, and intoxicated
driving incidents involving persons
subject to this part. The exchange of
information is limited to Army and Air
Force military personnel. Provost
marshals will not collect and use data
concerning civilian employees, family
members, and contract personnel except
as allowed by state and Federal laws.
§ 634.42
Compliance with State laws.
(a) Installation commanders will
inform service members, contractors
and DOD civilian employees to comply
with State and local traffic laws when
operating government motor vehicles.
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(b) Commanders will coordinate with
the proper civil law enforcement agency
before moving Government vehicles that
exceed legal limits or regulations or that
may subject highway users to unusual
hazards. (See AR 55–162/OPNAVINST
4600.11D/AFJI 24–216/MCO 4643.5C).
(c) Installation commanders will
maintain liaison with civil enforcement
agencies and encourage the following:
(1) Release of a Government vehicle
operator to military authorities unless
one of the following conditions exists.
(i) The offense warrants detention.
(ii) The person’s condition is such
that further operation of a motor vehicle
could result in injury to the person or
others.
(2) Prompt notice to military
authorities when military personnel or
drivers of Government motor vehicles
have—
(i) Committed serious violations of
civil traffic laws.
(ii) Been involved in traffic accidents.
(3) Prompt notice of actions by a State
or host nation to suspend, revoke, or
restrict the State or host nation driver’s
license (vehicle operation privilege) of
persons who—
(i) Operate Government motor
vehicles.
(ii) Regularly operate a POV on the
installation. (See also § 634.16).
§ 634.43 Civil-military cooperative
programs.
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(a) State-Armed Forces Traffic
Workshop Program. This program is an
organized effort to coordinate military
and civil traffic safety activities
throughout a State or area. Installation
commanders will cooperate with State
and local officials in this program and
provide proper support and
participation.
(b) Community-Installation Traffic
Workshop Program. Installation
commanders should establish a local
workshop program to coordinate the
installation traffic efforts with those of
local communities. Sound and practical
traffic planning depends on a balanced
program of traffic enforcement,
engineering, and education. Civilian
and military legal and law enforcement
officers, traffic engineers, safety
officials, and public affairs officers
should take part.
Subpart E—Driving Records and the
Traffic Point System
§ 634.44
Driving records.
Army installations will use DA Form
3626 (Vehicle Registration/Driver
Record) to record vehicle traffic
accidents, moving violations,
suspension or revocation actions, and
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traffic point assessments involving
military and DOD civilian personnel,
their family members, and other
personnel operating motor vehicles on a
military installation. Other Services and
DLA will use their service equivalent
form for this purpose. Table 1 to part
634 prescribes mandatory minimum or
maximum suspension or revocation
periods. Traffic points are not assessed
for suspension or revocation actions.
Table 1 to Part 634—Suspension/
Revocation of Driving Privileges (See
Notes 1 and 2).
Assessment 1: Two-year revocation is
mandatory on determination of facts by
installation commander. (For Army, a
five-year revocation is mandatory.)
Violation: Driving while driver’s
license or installation driving privileges
are under suspension or revocation.
Assessment 2: One-year revocation is
mandatory on determination of facts by
installation commander.
Violation: Refusal to submit to or
failure to complete chemical tests
(implied consent).
Assessment 3: One-year revocation is
mandatory on conviction.
Violation:
A. Manslaughter (or negligent
homicide by vehicle) resulting from the
operation of a motor vehicle.
B. Driving or being in actual physical
control of a motor vehicle while under
the influence of intoxicating liquor
(0.08% or greater on DOD installations;
violation of civil law off post).
C. Driving a motor vehicle while
under the influence of any narcotic, or
while under the influence of any other
drug (including alcohol) to the degree
rendered incapable of safe vehicle
operation.
D. Use of a motor vehicle in the
commission of a felony. Fleeing the
scene of an accident involving death or
personal injury, i.e.: hit and run.
E. Perjury or making a false statement
or affidavit under oath to responsible
officials relating to the ownership or
operation of motor vehicles.
F. Unauthorized use of a motor
vehicle belonging to another, when the
act does not amount to a felony.
Assessment 4: Suspension for a
period of six months or less or
revocation for a period not to exceed
one year is discretionary.
Violation: A. Mental or physical
impairment (not including alcohol or
other drug use) to the degree rendered
incompetent to drive.
B. Commission of an offense in
another State which, if committed on
the installation, would be grounds for
suspension or revocation.
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C. Permitting an unlawful or
fraudulent use of an official driver’s
license.
D. Conviction of fleeing, or attempting
to elude, a police officer.
E. Conviction of racing on the
highway.
Assessment 5: Loss of OF 46 for
minimum of six months is
discretionary.
Violation: Receiving a second oneyear suspension or revocation of driving
privileges within five years.
Notes
1. When imposing a suspension or
revocation because of an off-installation
offense, the effective date should be the
same as the date of civil conviction, or
the date that State or host-nation driving
privileges are suspended or revoked.
This effective date can be retroactive.
2. No points are assessed for
revocation or suspension actions.
Except for implied consent violations,
revocations must be based on a
conviction by a civilian court or courtsmartial, non-judicial punishment under
Article 15, UCMJ, or a separate hearing
as addressed in this part. If revocation
for implied consent is combined with
another revocation, such as one year for
intoxicated driving, revocations may
run consecutively (total of 24 months)
or concurrently (total of 12 months).
The installation commander’s policy
should be applied systematically and
not on a case-by-case basis.
§ 634.45
The traffic point system.
The traffic point system provides a
uniform administrative device to
impartially judge driving performance
of Service and DLA personnel. This
system is not a disciplinary measure or
a substitute for punitive action. Further,
this system is not intended to interfere
in any way with the reasonable exercise
of an installation commander’s
prerogative to issue, suspend, revoke,
deny, or reinstate installation driving
privileges.
§ 634.46
Point system application.
(a) The Services and DLA are required
to use the point system and procedures
prescribed in this section without
change.
(b) The point system in of this part
applies to all operators of U.S.
Government motor vehicles, on or off
Federal property. The system also
applies to violators reported to
installation officials in accordance with
§ 634.46.
(c) Points will be assessed when the
person is found to have committed a
violation and the finding is by either the
unit commander, civilian supervisor, a
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military or civilian court (including a
U.S. Magistrate), or by payment of fine,
forfeiture of pay or allowances, or
posted bond, or collateral.
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Table 2 to Part 634—Point Assessment
for Moving Traffic Violations (See Note
1).
A. Violation: Reckless driving (willful
and wanton disregard for the safety of
persons or property).
Points assessed: 6
B. Violation: Owner knowingly and
willfully permitting a physically
impaired person to operate the owner’s
motor vehicle.
Points assessed: 6
C. Violation: Fleeing the scene (hit
and run)-property damage only.
Points assessed: 6
D. Violation: Driving vehicle while
impaired (blood-alcohol content more
than 0.05 percent and less than 0.08
percent).
Points assessed: 6
E. Violation: Speed contests.
Points assessed: 6
F. Violation: Speed too fast for
conditions.
Points assessed: 2
G. Violation: Speed too slow for traffic
conditions, and/or impeding the flow of
traffic, causing potential safety hazard.
Points assessed: 2
H. Violation: Failure of operator or
occupants to use available restraint
system devices while moving (operator
assessed points).
Points assessed: 2
I. Violation: Failure to properly
restrain children in a child restraint
system while moving (when child is 4
years of age or younger or the weight of
child does not exceed 45 pounds).
Points assessed: 2
J. Violation: One to 10 miles per hour
over posted speed limit.
Points assessed: 3
K. Violation: Over 10 but not more
than 15 miles per hour above posted
speed limit.
Points assessed: 4
L. Violation: Over 15 but not more
than 20 miles per hour above posted
speed limit.
Points assessed: 5
M. Violation: Over 20 miles per hour
above posted speed limit.
Points assessed: 6
N. Violation: Following too close.
Points assessed: 4
O. Violation: Failure to yield right of
way to emergency vehicle.
Points assessed: 4
P. Violation: Failure to stop for school
bus or school-crossing signals.
Points assessed: 4
Q. Violation: Failure to obey traffic
signals or traffic instructions of an
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enforcement officer or traffic warden; or
any official regulatory traffic sign or
device requiring a full stop or yield of
right of way; denying entry; or requiring
direction of traffic.
Points assessed: 4
R. Violation: Improper passing.
Points assessed: 4
S. Violation: Failure to yield (no
official sign involved).
Points assessed: 4
T. Violation: Improper turning
movements (no official sign involved).
Points assessed: 3
U. Violation: Wearing of headphones/
earphones while driving motor vehicles
(two or more wheels).
Points assessed: 3
V. Violation: Failure to wear an
approved helmet and/or required
protective equipment while operating or
riding on a motorcycle, MOPED, or a
three or four–wheel vehicle powered by
a motorcycle–like engine.
Points assessed: 3
W. Violation: Improper overtaking.
Points assessed: 3
X. Violation: Other moving violations
(involving driver behavior only).
Points assessed: 3
Y. Violation: Operating an unsafe
vehicle. (See Note 2).
Points assessed: 2
Z. Violation: Driver involved in
accident is deemed responsible (only
added to points assessed for specific
offenses).
Points assessed: 1
Notes:
1. When two or more violations are
committed on a single occasion, points
may be assessed for each individual
violation.
2. This measure should be used for
other than minor vehicle safety defects
or when a driver or registrant fails to
correct a minor defect (for example, a
burned out headlight not replaced
within the grace period on a warning
ticket).
§ 634.47
Point system procedures.
(a) Reports of moving traffic violations
recorded on DD Form 1408 or the CVB
will serve as a basis for determining
point assessment. For DD Form 1408,
return endorsements will be required
from commanders or supervisors.
(b) On receipt of DD Form 1408 or
other military law enforcement report of
a moving violation, the unit
commander, designated supervisor, or
person otherwise designated by the
installation commander will conduct an
inquiry. The commander will take or
recommend proper disciplinary or
administrative action. If a case involves
judicial or non-judicial actions, the final
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79007
report of action taken will not be
forwarded until final adjudication.
(c) On receipt of the report of action
taken (including action by a U.S.
Magistrate Court on the CVB), the
installation law enforcement officer will
assess the number of points appropriate
for the offense, and record the traffic
points or the suspension or revocation
of driving privileges on the person’s
driving record. Except as specified
otherwise in this part and other Service/
DLA regulations, points will not be
assessed or driving privileges
suspended or revoked when the report
of action taken indicates that neither
disciplinary nor administrative action
was taken.
(d) Installation commanders may
require the following driver
improvement measures as appropriate:
(1) Advisory letter through the unit
commander or supervisor to any person
who has acquired six traffic points
within a six-month period.
(2) Counseling or driver improvement
interview, by the unit commander, of
any person who has acquired more than
six but less than 12 traffic points within
a six-month period. This counseling or
interview should produce
recommendations to improve driver
performance.
(3) Referral for medical evaluation
when a driver, based on reasonable
belief, appears to have mental or
physical limits that have had or may
have an adverse affect on driving
performance.
(4) Attendance at remedial driver
training to improve driving
performance.
(5) Referral to an alcohol or drug
treatment or rehabilitation facility for
evaluation, counseling, or treatment.
This action is required for active
military personnel in all cases in which
alcohol or other drugs are a contributing
factor to a traffic citation, incident, or
accident.
(e) An individual’s driving privileges
may be suspended or revoked as
provided by this part regardless of
whether these improvement measures
are accomplished.
(f) Persons whose driving privileges
are suspended or revoked (for one
violation or an accumulation of 12
traffic points within 12 consecutive
months, or 18 traffic points within 24
consecutive months) will be notified in
writing through official channels
(§ 634.11). Except for the mandatory
minimum or maximum suspension or
revocation periods prescribed above, the
installation commander will establish
periods of suspension or revocation.
Any revocation based on traffic points
must be no less than six months. A
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longer period may be imposed on the
basis of a person’s overall driving record
considering the frequency, flagrancy,
severity of moving violations, and the
response to previous driver
improvement measures. In all cases,
military members must successfully
complete a prescribed course in
remedial driver training before driving
privileges are reinstated.
(g) Points assessed against a person
will remain in effect for point
accumulation purposes for 24
consecutive months. The review of
driver records to delete traffic points
should be done routinely during records
update while recording new offenses
and forwarding records to new duty
stations. Completion of a revocation
based on points requires removal from
the driver record of all points assessed
before the revocation.
(h) Removal of points does not
authorize removal of driving record
entries for moving violations, chargeable
accidents, suspensions, or revocations.
Record entries will remain posted on
individual driving records for the
following periods of time.
(1) Chargeable nonfatal traffic
accidents or moving violations-3 years.
(2) Non-mandatory suspensions or
revocations-5 years.
(3) Mandatory revocations-7 years.
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§ 634.48
Disposition of driving records.
Procedures will be established to
ensure prompt notice to the installation
law enforcement office when a person
assigned to or employed on the
installation is being transferred to
another installation, being released from
military service, or ending employment.
(a) If persons being transferred to a
new installation have valid points or
other entries on the driving records, the
law enforcement offices will forward the
records to the law enforcement office of
the gaining installation. Gaining
installation law enforcement offices
must coordinate with applicable
commanders and continue any existing
suspension or revocation based on
intoxicated driving or accumulation of
traffic points. Traffic points for persons
being transferred will continue to
accumulate as specified in § 634.46(g).
(b) Driving records of military
personnel being discharged or released
from active duty will be retained on file
for two years and then destroyed. In
cases of immediate reenlistment, change
of officer component or military or
civilian retirement when vehicle
registration is continued, the record will
remain active.
(c) Driving records of civilian
personnel terminating employment will
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be retained on file for two years and
then destroyed.
(d) Driving records of military family
members containing point assessments
or other entries will be forwarded to the
sponsor’s gaining installation in the
same manner as for service members. At
the new installation, records will be
analyzed and made available
temporarily to the sponsor’s unit
commander or supervisor for review.
(e) Driving records of retirees electing
to retain installation driving privileges
will be retained. Points accumulated or
entries on the driver record regarding
suspensions, revocations, moving
violations, or chargeable accidents will
not be deleted from driver records
except per § 634.46(g) and (h).
(f) Army users will comply with
paragraphs (a) and (d) of this section by
mailing the individual’s DA Form 3626
to the gaining installation Provost
Marshal/Director of Emergency
Services.
Subpart F—Impounding Privately
Owned Vehicles
§ 634.49
General.
This Subpart provides the standards
and procedures for law enforcement
personnel when towing, inventorying,
searching, impounding, and disposing
of POVs. This policy is based on:
(a) The interests of the Services and
DLA in crime prevention, traffic safety,
and the orderly flow of vehicle traffic
movement.
(b) The vehicle owner’s constitutional
rights to due process, freedom from
unreasonable search and seizure, and
freedom from deprivation of private
property.
§ 634.50
Standards for impoundment.
(a) POVs should not be impounded
unless the vehicles clearly interfere with
ongoing operations or movement of
traffic, threaten public safety or
convenience, are involved in criminal
activity, contain evidence of criminal
activity, or are stolen or abandoned.
(b) The impoundment of a POV would
be inappropriate when reasonable
alternatives to impoundment exist.
(1) Attempts should be made to locate
the owner of the POV and have the
vehicle removed.
(2) The vehicle may be moved a short
distance to a legal parking area and
temporarily secured until the owner is
found.
(3) Another responsible person may
be allowed to drive or tow the POV with
permission from the owner, operator, or
person empowered to control the
vehicle. In this case, the owner,
operator, or person empowered to
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control the vehicle will be informed that
law enforcement personnel are not
responsible for safeguarding the POV.
(c) Impounding of POVs is justified
when any of the following conditions
exist:
(1) The POV is illegally parked—
(i) On a street or bridge, in a tunnel,
or is double parked, and interferes with
the orderly flow of traffic.
(ii) On a sidewalk, within an
intersection, on a cross-walk, on a
railroad track, in a fire lane, or is
blocking a driveway, so that the vehicle
interferes with operations or creates a
safety hazard to other roadway users or
the general public. An example would
be a vehicle parked within 15 feet of a
fire hydrant or blocking a properly
marked driveway of a fire station or
aircraft-alert crew facility.
(iii) When blocking an emergency exit
door of any public place (installation
theater, club, dining hall, hospital, and
other facility).
(iv) In a ‘‘tow-away’’ zone that is so
marked with proper signs.
(2) The POV interferes with—
(i) Street cleaning or snow removal
operations and attempts to contact the
owner have been unsuccessful.
(ii) Emergency operations during a
natural disaster or fire or must be
removed from the disaster area during
cleanup operations.
(3) The POV has been used in a crime
or contains evidence of criminal
activity.
(4) The owner or person in charge has
been apprehended and is unable or
unwilling to arrange for custody or
removal.
(5) The POV is mechanically defective
and is a menace to others using the
public roadways.
(6) The POV is disabled by a traffic
incident and the operator is either
unavailable or physically incapable of
having the vehicle towed to a place of
safety for storage or safekeeping.
(7) Law enforcement personnel
reasonably believe the vehicle is
abandoned.
§ 634.51
Towing and storage.
(a) Impounded POVs may be towed
and stored by either the Services and
DLA or a contracted wrecker service
depending on availability of towing
services and the local commander’s
preference.
(b) The installation commander will
designate an enclosed area on the
installation that can be secured by lock
and key for an impound lot to be used
by the military or civilian wrecker
service. An approved impoundment
area belonging to the contracted wrecker
service may also be used provided the
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area assures adequate accountability
and security of towed vehicles. One set
of keys to the enclosed area will be
maintained by the installation law
enforcement officer or designated
individual.
(c) Temporary impoundment and
towing of POVs for violations of the
installation traffic code or involvement
in criminal activities will be
accomplished under the direct
supervision of law enforcement
personnel.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 634.52
Procedures for impoundment.
(a) Unattended POVs. (1) DD Form
2504 (Abandoned Vehicle Notice) will
be conspicuously placed on POVs
considered unattended. This action will
be documented by an entry in the
installation law enforcement desk
journal or blotter.
(2) The owner will be allowed three
days from the date the POV is tagged to
remove the vehicle before impoundment
action is initiated. If the vehicle has not
been removed after three days, it will be
removed by the installation towing
service or the contracted wrecker
service. If a contracted wrecker service
is used, a DD Form 2505 (Abandoned
Vehicle Removal Authorization) will be
completed and issued to the contractor
by the installation law enforcement
office.
(3) After the vehicle has been
removed, the installation law
enforcement officer or the contractor
will complete DD Form 2506 (Vehicle
Impoundment Report) as a record of the
actions taken.
(i) An inventory listing personal
property will be done to protect the
owner, law enforcement personnel, the
contractor, and the commander.
(ii) The contents of a closed container
such as a suitcase inside the vehicle
need not be inventoried. Such articles
should be opened only if necessary to
identify the owner of the vehicle or if
the container might contain explosives
or otherwise present a danger to the
public. Merely listing the container and
sealing it with security tape will suffice.
(iii) Personal property must be placed
in a secure area for safekeeping.
(4) DD Form 2507 (Notice of Vehicle
Impoundment) will be forwarded by
certified mail to the address of the last
known owner of the vehicle to advise
the owner of the impoundment action,
and request information concerning the
owner’s intentions pertaining to the
disposition of the vehicle.
(b) Stolen POVs or vehicles involved
in criminal activity. (1) When the POV
is to be held for evidentiary purposes,
the vehicle should remain in the
custody of the applicable Service or
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DLA until law enforcement purposes are
served.
(2) Recovered stolen POVs will be
released to the registered owner, unless
held for evidentiary purposes, or to the
law enforcement agency reporting the
vehicle stolen, as appropriate.
(3) A POV held on request of other
authorities will be retained in the
custody of the applicable Service or
DLA until the vehicle can be released to
such authorities.
§ 634.53 Search incident to impoundment
based on criminal activity.
Search of a POV in conjunction with
impoundment based on criminal
activity will likely occur in one of the
following general situations:
(a) The owner or operator is not
present. This situation could arise
during traffic and crime-related
impoundments and abandoned vehicle
seizures. A property search related to an
investigation of criminal activity should
not be conducted without search
authority unless the item to be seized is
in plain view or is readily discernible
on the outside as evidence of criminal
activity. When in doubt, proper search
authority should be obtained before
searching.
(b) The owner or operator is present.
This situation can occur during either a
traffic or criminal incident, or if the
operator is apprehended for a crime or
serious traffic violation and sufficient
probable cause exists to seize the
vehicle. This situation could also arise
during cases of intoxicated driving or
traffic accidents in which the operator is
present but incapacitated or otherwise
unable to make adequate arrangements
to safeguard the vehicle. If danger exists
to the police or public or if there is risk
of loss or destruction of evidence, an
investigative type search of the vehicle
may be conducted without search
authority. (Air Force, see AFP 125–2).
§ 634.54 Disposition of vehicles after
impoundment.
(a) If a POV is impounded for
evidentiary purposes, the vehicle can be
held for as long as the evidentiary or
law enforcement purpose exists. The
vehicle must then be returned to the
owner without delay unless directed
otherwise by competent authority.
(b) If the vehicle is unclaimed after
120 days from the date notification was
mailed to the last known owner or the
owner released the vehicle by properly
completing DD Form 2505, the vehicle
will be disposed of by one of the
following procedures:
(1) Release to the lien holder, if
known.
(2) Processed as abandoned property
in accordance with DOD 4160.21–M.
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79009
(i) Property may not be disposed of
until diligent effort has been made to
find the owner; or the heirs, next of kin,
or legal representative of the owner.
(ii) The diligent effort to find one of
those mentioned in paragraph (a) of this
section shall begin no later than seven
days after the date on which the
property comes into custody or control
of the law enforcement agency.
(iii) The period for which this effort
is continued may not exceed 45 days.
(iv) If the owner or those mentioned
in § 634.53 are determined, but not
found, the property may not be disposed
of until the expiration of 45 days after
the date when notice, giving the time
and place of the intended sale or other
disposition, has been sent by certified or
registered mail to that person at their
last known address.
(v) When diligent effort to determine
those mentioned in paragraph (b)(2)(iv)
of this section is unsuccessful, the
property may be disposed of without
delay, except that if it has a fair market
value of more than $500, the law
enforcement official may not dispose of
the property until 45 days after the date
it is received at the storage point.
(c) All contracts for the disposal of
abandoned vehicles must comply with
10 U.S.C. 2575.
Subpart G—List of State Driver’s
License Agencies
§ 634.55 List of State driver’s license
agencies.
Notification of State Driver’s License
Agencies. The installation commander
will notify the State driver’s license
agency of those personnel whose
installation driving privileges are
revoked for one year or more, following
final adjudication of the intoxicated
driving offense or for refusing to submit
to a lawful blood-alcohol content test in
accordance with § 634.8. This
notification will include the basis for
the suspension and the blood alcohol
level. The notification will be sent to the
State in which the driver’s license was
issued. A current listing of State driver’s
license agencies can be located on the
worldwide web at https://www.usa.gov/
Topics/Motor-Vehicles.shtml. State
driver’s license agencies are listed as
follows:
Alabama: Motor Vehicle Division,
2721Gunter Park Drive, Montgomery,
AL36101, (205) 271–3250.
Alaska: Motor Vehicle Division, P.O.
Box 100960, Anchorage, AK 99510,
(907) 269–5572.
Arizona: Motor Vehicle Division, 1801
West Jefferson Street Phoenix, AZ
85007, (602) 255–7295.
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Arkansas: Motor Vehicle Division, Joel
& Ledbetter Bldg., 7th and Wolfe
Streets, Little Rock, AR 72203, (501)
371–1886.
California: Department of Motor
Vehicles, P.O. Box 932340,
Sacramento, CA 94232, (916) 445–
0898.
Colorado: Motor Vehicle Division, 140
West Sixth Avenue, Denver, CO
80204, (303) 866–3158.
Connecticut: Department of Motor
Vehicles, 60 State Street Wethersfield,
CT 06109, (203) 566–5904.
Delaware: Motor Vehicle Director, State
Highway Administration Bldg., P.O.
Box 698, Dover, DE 19903, (302) 736–
4421.
District of Columbia: Department of
Transportation, Bureau of Motor
Vehicles, 301 C Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20001, (202) 727–
5409.
Florida: Division of Motor Vehicles,
Neil Kirkman Building, Tallahassee,
FL 32301, (904) 488–6921.
Georgia: Motor Vehicle Division,
Trinity-Washington Bldg., Room 114,
Atlanta, GA 30334, (404) 656–4149.
Hawaii: Division of Motor Vehicle and
Licensing, 1455 S. Benetania Street,
Honolulu, HI 96814, (808) 943–3221.
Idaho: Transportation Department, 3311
State Street, P.O. Box 34, Boise, ID
83731, (208) 334–3650.
Illinois: Secretary of State, Centennial
Building, Springfield, IL 62756, (217)
782–4815.
Indiana: Bureau of Motor Vehicles,
State Office Building, Room 901,
Indianapolis, IN 46204, (317) 232–
2701.
Iowa: Department of Transportation
Office of Operating Authority, Lucas
Office Bldg., Des Moines, IA 50319,
(515) 281–5664.
Kansas: Department of Revenue,
Division of Vehicles, Interstate
Registration Bureau, State Office
Bldg., Topeka, KS 66612, (913) 296–
3681.
Kentucky: Department of
Transportation, New State Office
Building, Frankfort, KY 40622, (502)
564–4540.
Louisiana: Motor Vehicle
Administrator, S. Foster Drive, Baton
Rouge, LA 70800, (504) 925–6304.
Maine: Department of State, Motor
Vehicle Division, Augusta, ME 04333,
(207) 289–5440.
Maryland: Motor Vehicle
Administration, 6601 Ritchie
Highway NE., Glen Burnie, MD
21062, (301) 768–7000.
Massachusetts: Registry of Motor
Vehicle, 100 Nashua Street, Boston,
MA 02114, (617) 727–3780.
Michigan: Department of State, Division
of Driver Licenses and Vehicle
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:10 Dec 17, 2015
Jkt 238001
Records, Lansing, MI 48918, (517)
322–1486.
Minnesota: Department of Public Safety,
108 Transportation Building, St. Paul,
MN 55155, (612) 296–2138.
Mississippi: Office of State Tax
Commission, Woolfolk Building,
Jackson, MS 39205, (601) 982–1248.
Missouri: Department of Revenue, Motor
Vehicles Bureau, Harry S. Truman
Bldg., 301 W. High Street, Jefferson
City, MO 65105, (314) 751–3234.
Montana: Highway Commission, Box
4639, Helena, MT 59604, (406) 449–
2476.
Nebraska: Department of Motor
Vehicles, P.O. Box 94789, Lincoln, NE
68509, (402) 471–3891.
Nevada: Department of Motor Vehicles,
Carson City, NV 89711, (702) 885–
5370.
New Hampshire: Department of Safety,
Division of Motor Vehicles, James H.
Haynes Bldg., Concord, NH 03305,
(603) 271–2764.
New Jersey: Motor Vehicle Division, 25
S. Montgomery Street, Trenton, NJ
08666, (609) 292–2368.
New Mexico: Motor Transportation
Division, Joseph M. Montoya
Building, Santa Fe, NM 87503, (505)
827–0392.
New York: Division of Motor Vehicles,
Empire State Plaza, Albany, NY
12228, (518) 474–2121.
North Carolina: Division of Motor
Vehicles, Motor Vehicles Bldg.,
Raleigh, NC 27697, (919) 733–2403.
North Dakota: Motor Vehicle
Department, Capitol Grounds,
Bismarck, ND 58505, (701) 224–2619.
Ohio: Bureau of Motor Vehicles, P.O.
Box 16520, Columbus, OH 43216,
(614) 466–4095.
Oklahoma: Oklahoma Tax Commission,
Motor Vehicle Division, 2501 Lincoln
Boulevard, Oklahoma City, OK 73194,
(405) 521–3036
Oregon: Motor Vehicles Division, 1905
Lana Avenue NE., Salem, OR 97314,
(503) 378–6903.
Pennsylvania: Department of
Transportation, Bureau of Motor
Vehicles, Transportation and Safety
Bldg., Harrisburg, PA 17122, (717)
787–3130.
Rhode Island: Department of Motor
Vehicles, State Office Building,
Providence, RI 02903, (401) 277–6900.
South Carolina: Motor Vehicle Division,
P.O. Drawer 1498, Columbia, SC
29216, (803) 758–5821.
South Dakota: Division of Motor
Vehicles, 118 W. Capitol, Pierre, SD
57501, (605) 773–3501.
Tennessee: Department of Revenue,
Motor Vehicle Division, 500
Deaderick Street, Nashville, TN
37242, (615) 741–1786.
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Texas: Department of Highways and
Public Transportation, Motor Vehicle
Division, 40th and Jackson Avenue,
Austin, TX 78779, (512) 475–7686.
Utah: Motor Vehicle Division State
Fairgrounds, 1095 Motor Avenue, Salt
Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 533–5311.
Vermont: Department of Motor Vehicles,
State Street, Montpelier, VT 05603,
(802) 828–2014.
Virginia: Department of Motor Vehicles,
2300 W. Broad Street, Richmond, VA
23220, (804) 257–1855.
Washington: Department of Licensing,
Highways—Licenses Building,
Olympia, WA 98504, (206) 753–6975.
West Virginia: Department of Motor
Vehicles, 1800 Washington Street,
East Charleston, WV 25317, (304)
348–2719.
Wisconsin: Department of
Transportation Reciprocity and
Permits, P.O. Box 7908, Madison, WI
53707, (608) 266–2585.
Wyoming: Department of Revenue,
Policy Division, 122 W. 25th Street,
Cheyenne, WY 82002, (307) 777–
5273.
Guam: Deputy Director, Revenue and
Taxation, Government of Guam,
Agana, Guam 96910, (671) 635–7651
Puerto Rico: Department of
Transportation and Public Works,
Bureau of Motor Vehicles, P.O. Box
41243, Minillas Station, Santurce,
Puerto Rico 00940, (809) 722–2823.
[FR Doc. 2015–31762 Filed 12–17–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3710–08–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket Number USCG–2015–1025]
RIN 1625–AA00
Safety Zone; JI Mei Design
Construction Co., LTD, Hudson River,
Manhattan, NY
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard proposes to
establish a temporary safety zone for
certain waters of the Hudson River. This
action is necessary to provide for the
safety of life on these navigable waters
of the Hudson River near Hells Kitchen,
NY during a fireworks display, on
February 6, 2016. This proposed
rulemaking would prohibit persons and
vessels from being in the safety zone
unless authorized by the Captain of the
Port New York or a designated
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\18DEP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 243 (Friday, December 18, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 78989-79010]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-31762]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army
32 CFR Part 634
RIN 0702-AA66
Docket No. USA-2014-0005]
Motor Vehicle Traffic Supervision
AGENCY: Department of the Army, DoD.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of the Army proposes to revise its regulation
concerning military traffic supervision on Department of Defense
installations worldwide.
DATES: Consideration will be given to all comments received by:
February 16, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by 32 CFR part 634,
Docket No. USA-2014-0005 and or RIN 0702-AA66, by any of the following
methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Department of Defense, Office of the Deputy Chief
Management Officer, Directorate of Oversight and Compliance, Regulatory
and Audit Matters Office, 9010 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-
9010.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name
and docket number or Regulatory Information Number (RIN) for this
Federal Register document. The general policy for comments and other
submissions from members of the public is to make these submissions
available for public viewing on the Internet at https://www.regulations.gov as they are received without change, including any
personal identifiers or contact information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. John Hargitt, (703) 424-3309.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Executive Summary
I. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
a. The publication of this proposed rule announces administrative
revision of a current Army regulation covering motor vehicle traffic
supervision. It outlines policy on vehicle registration; implements the
0.08 blood alcohol content as the standard for adverse administrative
actions; permits involuntary extraction of blood under revised Military
Rules of Evidence in cases where intoxicated driving is suspected;
provides policy on towing, storing, and impounding vehicles; adopts the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration technical standards for
breathalyzer equipment; establishes traffic points for seat belt and
child restraint device violations; and requires that new safety
requirements be included in the installation traffic code. It
implements Department of Defense Directive 5525.04, ``Enforcement of
the State Traffic Laws on DoD Installations'' (available at https://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/pdf/552504p.pdf), and Department of
Defense Instruction 6055.04, ``DoD Traffic Safety Program'' (available
at https://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/pdf/605504p.pdf). It also
implements portions of Department of Defense Instruction 7730.47,
``Defense Incident-Based Reporting System (DIBRS)'' (available at
https://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/pdf/773047p.pdf), that apply
to dispositions. This regulation was most recently published in the
Federal Register on April 12, 2005 (70 FR 18969).
b. The legal authority for this regulatory action is: 70 FR 18969,
70 FR 18982, 10 U.S.C. 2575, 18 U.S.C. 13.
II. Summary of the Major Provisions of the Regulatory Action in
Question
The major provisions of this regulatory action include: Driving
privileges, suspensions, revocations, vehicle registration, traffic
supervision and offense reporting, accident investigation and
reporting, release of information, processing drunk drivers, and
impounding privately owned vehicles.
III. Cost and Benefits
This proposed rule will not have a monetary effect upon the public.
This proposed rule facilitates information
[[Page 78990]]
sharing between authorized law enforcement agencies to enhance
protection of personnel and resources critical to DoD mission
assurance. Costs of law enforcement, personnel, reporting systems and
records management are offset through the efficient collection of data
to support traffic enforcement on military installations and enhance
safety through intelligence led policing efforts. These efforts allow
the efficient deployment of police and security forces proactively to
deter, prevent and mitigate losses due to criminal behavior and civil
violations.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department of the Army has determined that the Regulatory
Flexibility Act does not apply because the proposed rule does not have
a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
within the meaning of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612.
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Department of the Army has determined that the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act does not apply because the proposed rule does not
include a mandate that may result in estimated costs to State, local or
tribal governments in the aggregate, or the private sector, of $100
million or more.
D. National Environmental Policy Act
The Department of the Army has determined that the National
Environmental Policy Act does not apply because the proposed rule does
not have an adverse impact on the environment.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Department of the Army has determined that the Paperwork
Reduction Act doesn't apply. There is no additional burden for
collection of information from the public or the addition of additional
government forms associated with this rulemaking. Information collected
to support this proposed rule is that information normally collected in
the performance of law and order and traffic enforcement operations
across the United States. Information collected is used to determine
wants and warrants issued for criminal offenders, persons driving under
suspended or revoked licenses, and traffic point assessment. Failure to
provide driver's license or vehicle registration information may result
in detention and fines. Procedures and business processes outlined in
this proposed rule provide uniform policy concerning military traffic
supervision practices to improve productivity, efficiency, and
effectiveness of law enforcement traffic supervision, reporting efforts
including the reduction of information collection burdens on the public
and the improvement of law enforcement service delivery while
maintaining privacy, confidentiality and information systems
protections.
F. Executive Order 12630 (Government Actions and Interference With
Constitutionally Protected Property Rights)
The Department of the Army has determined that Executive Order
12630 does not apply because the proposed rule does not impair private
property rights.
G. Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) and Executive
Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review)
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distribute impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. This proposed rule has been designated a ``significant
regulatory action,'' although not economically significant, under
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866. Accordingly, the proposed rule
has been reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
H. Executive Order 13045 (Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risk and Safety Risks)
The Department of the Army has determined that according to the
criteria defined in Executive Order 13045. This proposed rule does not
apply since it does not implement or require actions impacting
environmental health or safety risks to children.
I. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
The Department of the Army has determined that according to the
criteria defined in Executive Order 13132 this proposed rule does not
apply because it will not have a substantial effect on the States, on
the relationship between the national government and the States, or on
the distribution of power and responsibilities among various levels of
government.
Thomas S. Blair,
Chief, Law Enforcement Policy Branch, Office of the Provost Marshal
General.
List of Subjects in 32 CFR Part 634
Crime, Distracted driving, Driving under the influence of drugs or
alcohol, Investigations, Law, Law enforcement, Law enforcement
officers, Military law, Penalties, Personal safety and protection
equipment, Text messaging, Traffic, Use of electronic devices.
For reasons stated in the preamble the Department of the Army
proposes to revise 32 CFR part 634 to read as follows:
PART 634--MOTOR VEHICLE TRAFFIC SUPERVISION
Subpart A--Introduction
Sec.
634.1 Purpose.
634.2 References.
634.3 Explanation of abbreviations and terms.
634.4 Responsibilities.
634.5 Program objectives.
Subpart B--Driving Privileges
634.6 Requirements for driving privileges.
634.7 Stopping and inspecting personnel or vehicles.
634.8 Implied consent.
634.9 Suspension or revocation of driving or privately owned vehicle
registration privileges.
634.10 Remedial driver training programs.
634.11 Administrative due process for suspensions and revocations.
634.12 Army administrative actions against intoxicated drivers.
634.13 Alcohol and drug abuse programs.
634.14 Restoration of driving privileges upon acquittal of
intoxicated driving.
634.15 Restricted driving privileges or probation.
634.16 Reciprocal State-Military action.
634.17 Extensions of suspensions and revocations.
634.18 Reinstatement of driving privileges.
Subpart C--Motor Vehicle Registration
634.19 Registration policy.
634.20 Privately owned vehicle operation requirements.
634.21 Department of Defense Form 2220.
634.22 Gold Star decals.
634.23 Termination or denial of registration.
634.24 Specified consent to impoundment.
Subpart D--Traffic Supervision
634.25 Traffic planning and codes.
634.26 Installation traffic codes.
634.27 Traffic law enforcement principles.
634.28 Speed-measuring devices.
634.29 Traffic accident investigation.
634.30 Traffic accident investigation reports.
634.31 Use of traffic accident investigation report data.
[[Page 78991]]
634.32 Parking.
634.33 Traffic violation reports.
634.34 Training of law enforcement personnel.
634.35 Blood alcohol concentration standards.
634.36 Chemical testing policies and procedures.
634.37 Detection, apprehension, and testing of intoxicated drivers.
634.38 Voluntary breath and bodily fluid testing based on implied
consent.
634.39 Involuntary extraction of bodily fluids in traffic cases.
634.40 Testing at the request of the apprehended person.
634.41 General off installation traffic activities.
634.42 Compliance with State laws.
634.43 Civil-military cooperative programs.
Subpart E--Driving Records and the Traffic Point System
634.44 Driving records.
634.45 The traffic point system.
634.46 Point system application.
634.47 Point system procedures.
634.48 Disposition of driving records.
Subpart F--Impounding Privately Owned Vehicles
634.49 General.
634.50 Standards for impoundment.
634.51 Towing and storage.
634.52 Procedures for impoundment.
634.53 Search incident to impoundment based on criminal activity.
634.54 Disposition of vehicles after impoundment.
Subpart G--List of State Driver's License Agencies
634.55 List of State driver's license agencies.
Authority: 10 U.S.C. 30112(g); 5 U.S.C. 2951; Pub. L. 89-564;
89-670; 91-605; and 93-87.
Subpart A--Introduction
Sec. 634.1 Purpose.
(a) This subpart establishes policy, responsibilities, and
procedures for motor vehicle traffic supervision on military
installations in the continental United States (CONUS) and overseas
areas. This includes but is not limited to the following:
(1) Granting, suspending, or revoking the privilege to operate a
privately owned vehicle (POV).
(2) Registration of POVs.
(3) Administration of vehicle registration and driver performance
records.
(4) Driver improvement programs.
(5) Police traffic supervision.
(6) Off-installation traffic activities.
(b) Commanders in overseas areas are authorized to modify these
policies and procedures in the following instances:
(1) When dictated by host nation relationships, treaties, and
agreements.
(2) When traffic operations under military supervision necessitate
measures to safeguard and protect the morale, discipline, and good
order in the Services.
Sec. 634.2 References.
Required and related publications along with prescribed and
referenced forms are listed in Appendix A of AR 190-5.
Sec. 634.3 Explanation of abbreviations and terms.
Abbreviations and special terms used in this subpart are explained
in the Glossary of AR 190-5. It is available on the internet at:
www.usapa.army.mil.
Sec. 634.4 Responsibilities.
(a) Departmental. The Provost Marshal General, Headquarters,
Department of the Army (HQDA); Director, Naval Criminal Investigative
Service, U.S. Navy (USN); Headquarters, Air Force Security Forces
Center; Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps (USMC); Staff Director, Command
Security Office, Headquarters, Defense Logistics Agency (DLA), and
Chief, National Guard Bureau will--
(1) Exercise staff supervision over programs for motor vehicle
traffic supervision.
(2) Develop standard policies and procedures that include
establishing an automated records program on traffic supervision.
(3) Maintain liaison with interested staff agencies and other
military departments on traffic supervision.
(4) Maintain liaison with departmental safety personnel on traffic
safety and accident reporting systems.
(5) Coordinate with national, regional, and state traffic officials
and agencies, and actively participate in conferences and workshops
sponsored by the Government or private groups at the national level.
(6) Help organize and monitor police traffic supervision training.
(7) Participate in the national effort to reduce intoxicated
driving.
(b) All major commanders. Major commanders of the Army, Navy, Air
Force, Marine Corps, and DLA will--
(1) Manage traffic supervision in their commands.
(2) Cooperate with the support programs of state and regional
highway traffic safety organizations.
(3) Coordinate regional traffic supervision activities with other
major military commanders in assigned geographic areas of
responsibility.
(4) Monitor agreements between installations and host state
authorities for reciprocal reporting of suspension and revocation of
driving privileges.
(5) Participate in state and host nation efforts to reduce
intoxicated driving.
(6) Establish awards and recognition programs to recognize
successful installation efforts to eliminate intoxicated driving.
Ensure that criteria for these awards are positive in nature and
include more than just apprehensions for intoxicated driving.
(7) Modify policies and procedures when required by host nation
treaties or agreements.
(c) Major Army commanders. Major Army commanders will ensure
subordinate installations implement all provisions of this part.
(d) Commanding General, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command
(CG, TRADOC). The CG, TRADOC will ensure that technical training for
functional users is incorporated into service school instructional
programs.
(e) Installation or activity commander, Director of Military
Support and State Adjutant General. The installation or activity
commander (for the Navy, the term installation shall refer to either
the regional commander or installation commanding officer, whoever has
ownership of the traffic program) will--
(1) Establish an effective traffic supervision program.
(2) Cooperate with civilian police agencies and other local, state,
or federal government agencies concerned with traffic supervision.
(3) Ensure that traffic supervision is properly integrated in the
overall installation traffic safety program.
(4) Actively participate in Alcohol Safety Action Projects (ASAP)
in neighboring communities.
(5) Ensure that active duty Army law enforcement personnel follow
the provisions of AR 190-45 in reporting all criminal violations and
utilize the Army Law Enforcement Reporting and Tracking System (ALERTS)
to support reporting requirements and procedures. Air Force personnel
engaged in law enforcement and adjudication activities will follow the
provisions of AFI 31-203 in reporting all criminal and traffic
violations, and utilize the Security Forces Management Information
Systems (SFMIS) to support reporting requirements and procedures.
(6) Implement the terms of this part in accordance with the
provisions of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute, 5
U.S.C. chapter 71 and title 5 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) parts
7101 through 7905.
(7) Revoke driving privileges in accordance with this part.
(f) Installation law enforcement officer. The installation law
enforcement officer will--
(1) Exercise overall staff responsibility for directing,
regulating, and controlling
[[Page 78992]]
traffic, and enforcing laws and regulations pertaining to traffic
control.
(2) Assist traffic engineering functions at installations by
participating in traffic control studies designed to obtain information
on traffic problems and usage patterns.
(g) Safety officer. Safety officers will participate in and develop
traffic accident prevention initiatives in support of the installation
traffic safety program.
(h) Facility engineer (public works officer at Navy installations).
The facility engineer, engineer officer or civil engineer at Air Force
installations, in close coordination with the law enforcement officer,
will:
(1) Perform that phase of engineering concerned with the planning,
design, construction, and maintenance of streets, highways, and
abutting lands.
(2) Select, determine appropriate design, procure, construct,
install, and maintain permanent traffic and parking control devices in
coordination with the law enforcement officer and installation safety
officer.
(3) Ensure that traffic signs, signals, and pavement markings
conform to the standards in the current Manual on Uniform Traffic
Control Devices for Streets and Highways.
(4) Ensure that planning, design, construction, and maintenance of
streets and highways conform to the Highway Safety Manual (HSM) as
implemented by the Army.
(i) Traffic engineer. The traffic engineer, in close coordination
with the law enforcement officer, will:
(1) Conduct formal traffic engineering studies.
(2) Apply traffic engineering measures, including traffic control
devices, to reduce the number and severity of traffic accidents. (If
there is no installation traffic engineer, installation commanders may
request these services through channels from the Commander, Military
Surface Deployment and Distribution Command, 1 Soldier Way, Scott AFB,
IL 62225).
(j) Army Alcohol and Drug Control Officer (ADCO). The ADCO will
provide treatment and education services to personnel with alcohol or
drug abuse problems.
(k) Navy Substance Abuse Rehabilitation Program (SARP) Directors.
These directors will--
(1) Supervise the alcohol and/or drug rehabilitation services to
personnel with alcohol or drug abuse problems.
(2) Provide remedial and/or motivational education for all persons
identified as alcohol or drug abusers who are evaluated as not
dependent on alcohol or drugs and who have been referred to level one
rehabilitation by their commands.
(l) Marine Corps Substance Abuse Program Officer. This officer will
provide alcohol and/or drug education, treatment, and rehabilitation
services to personnel with alcohol/drug abuse problems.
(m) DLA Employee Assistance Program Officer. This officer will
provide alcohol/drug counseling and referral services to identified
personnel with alcohol and/or drug abuse problems in accordance with
procedures prescribed by the Labor Relations Officer, Office of Human
Resource, HQ DLA.
(n) Alcohol/Drug Abuse Prevention Treatment (ADAPT) program. Air
Force Commanders will refer personnel identified with alcohol and/or
drug abuse problems to this program in accordance with established
procedures.
Sec. 634.5 Program objectives.
(a) The objectives of motor vehicle traffic supervision are to
assure--
(1) Safe and efficient movement of personnel and vehicles.
(2) Reduction of traffic deaths, injuries, and property damage from
traffic accidents. Most traffic accidents can be prevented.
Investigation of motor vehicle accidents should examine all factors,
operator status, vehicle condition, and supervisory control measures
involved.
(3) Integration of installation safety, engineering, legal,
medical, and law enforcement resources into the installation traffic
planning process.
(4) Removal of intoxicated drivers from installation roadways.
(b) [Reserved]
Subpart B--Driving Privileges
Sec. 634.6 Requirements for driving privileges.
(a) Driving a Government vehicle or POV on military installations
is a privilege granted by the installation commander. Persons who
accept the privilege must--
(1) Be lawfully licensed to operate motor vehicles in appropriate
classifications and not be under suspension or revocation in any state
or host country.
(2) Comply with laws and regulations governing motor vehicle
operations on any U.S. military installation.
(3) Comply with installation registration requirements in Sec.
634.19 of this section. Vehicle registration may be required on all
Army installations through use of the Vehicle Registration System
(VRS). Vehicle registration is required on all Air Force and DLA
installations and on National Guard installations as directed by the
Chief, National Guard Bureau.
(4) Possess, while operating a motor vehicle and produce on request
by law enforcement personnel, the following:
(i) Proof of vehicle ownership or state registration if required by
the issuing state or host nation.
(ii) A valid state, host nation, overseas command, or international
driver's license and/or OF 346 (U.S. Government Motor Vehicle
Operator's Identification Card), as applicable to the class vehicle to
be operated, supported by a DD Form 2 (Armed Forces of the United
States Geneva Convention Identification Card), U.S. Uniformed Services
Identification Card, Common Access Card (CAC) or other appropriate
identification for non-Department of Defense (DOD) civilians.
(iii) A valid record of motor vehicle safety inspection, as
required by the state or host nation and valid proof of insurance if
required by the state or locality.
(iv) Any regulatory permits, or other pertinent documents relative
to shipping and transportation of special cargo.
(v) When appropriate, documents that establish identification and
status of cargo or occupants.
(vi) Proof of valid insurance. Proof of insurance consists of an
insurance card, or other documents issued by the insurance company,
that has a policy effective date and an expiration date.
(b) Operators of Government motor vehicles must have proof of
authorization to operate the vehicle.
Sec. 634.7 Stopping and inspecting personnel or vehicles.
(a) Government vehicles may be stopped by law enforcement personnel
on military installations based on the installation commander's policy.
(1) Government vehicles may be stopped on or off installations as
determined by host nation agreement and command policy in overseas
areas.
(2) Stops and inspections of vehicles at installation gates or
entry points and in restricted areas will be conducted according to
command policy.
(b) Stops and inspections of POVs within the military installation,
other than at restricted areas or at an installation gate, are
authorized only when there is a reasonable suspicion of criminal
activity, or a violation of a traffic regulation, or the installation
commander's policy. Marine Corps users are guided by publication of
Marine Corps order and Military Rules of Evidence 311-316 and local
command regulations. DLA users are
[[Page 78993]]
guided by DLA One Book Process Chapter, Search and Seizure.
(c) At the time of stop, the driver and occupants may be required
to display all pertinent documents, including but not limited to:
(1) DD Form 2 (Active, Reserve, Retired, etc.)
(2) Documents that establish the identity and status of civilians;
for example, Common Access Card (CAC), DD Form 1173 (Uniformed Services
Identification and Privilege Card), DA Form 1602 (Civilian
Identification), AF Form 354 (Civilian Identification Card), DD Form 2
(Armed Forces of the United States Identification Card), post pass,
national identity card, passport or other identification.
(3) Proper POV registration documents.
(4) Host nation vehicle registration documents, if applicable.
(5) Authorization to operate a Government vehicle, if applicable.
(6) Drivers license or OF 346 valid for the particular vehicle and
area of operation.
(7) Proof of insurance.
Sec. 634.8 Implied consent.
(a) Implied consent to blood, breath, or urine tests. Persons who
drive or operate motor vehicles (including cars, motorcycles, mopeds,
buses, trucks, or off-road vehicles [tractors, forklifts, cranes,
backhoes, bulldozers, golf carts and all terrain vehicles]) or
watercraft on the installation shall be deemed to have given their
consent to evidential tests for alcohol or other drug content of their
blood, breath, or urine when lawfully stopped, apprehended, or cited
for any offense allegedly committed while driving or in physical
control of a motor vehicle or watercraft on military installations to
determine the influence of intoxicants.
(b) Implied consent to impoundment. Any person granted the
privilege to operate or register a motor vehicle on a military
installation shall be deemed to have given his or her consent for the
removal and temporary impoundment of the POV when it is parked
illegally, or for unreasonable periods, as determined by the
installation commander or applicable authority, interfering with
military operations, creating a safety hazard, disabled by accident,
left unattended in a restricted or controlled area, or abandoned. Such
persons further agree to reimburse the United States for the cost of
towing and storage should their motor vehicle be removed or impounded.
Existence of these conditions will be determined by the installation
commander or designee.
(c) Any person who operates, registers, or is in control of a motor
vehicle on a military installation involved in a motor vehicle or
criminal infraction shall be informed that notice of the violation of
law or regulation will be forwarded to the Department of Motor Vehicles
(DMV) of the host state and/or home of record for the individual, and
to the NHTSA's National Driver Register, when applicable.
Sec. 634.9 Suspension or revocation of driving or privately owned
vehicle registration privileges.
The installation commander or designee may for cause, or any lawful
reason, administratively suspend or revoke driving privileges on the
installation. The suspension or revocation of installation driving
privileges or POV registrations, for lawful reasons unrelated to
traffic violations or safe vehicle operation, is not limited or
restricted by this part.
(a) Suspension. (1) Driving privileges are usually suspended when
other measures fail to improve a driver's performance. Measures should
include counseling, remedial driving training, and rehabilitation
programs if violator is entitled to the programs. Driving privileges
may also be suspended for up to six months if a driver continually
violates installation parking regulations. The commander will determine
standards for suspension based on frequency of parking violations and
publish those standards. Aboard Navy installations, any vehicle parked
in a fire lane will be towed at the owner's expense. Any vehicle parked
without authorization in an area restricted due to force protection
measures may subject the driver to immediate suspension by the
installation commanding officer. Vehicle will be towed at the owner's
and/or operator's expense.
(2) The installation commander has discretionary power to withdraw
the authorization of active duty military personnel, DOD civilian
employees, and non-appropriated funds (NAF) employees, contractors and
subcontractors to operate Government vehicles.
(3) Immediate suspension of installation or overseas command POV
driving privileges pending resolution of an intoxicated driving
incident is authorized for active duty military personnel, family
members, retired members of the military services, DOD civilian
personnel, and others with installation or overseas command driving
privileges, regardless of the geographic location of the intoxicated
driving incident. Suspension is authorized for non-DOD affiliated
civilians only with respect to incidents occurring on the installation
or in areas subject to military traffic supervision. After a review of
available information as specified in Sec. 634.11, installation
driving privileges will be immediately suspended pending resolution of
the intoxicated driving accident in the following circumstances:
(i) Refusal to take or complete a lawfully requested chemical test
to determine contents of blood for alcohol or other drugs.
(ii) Operating a motor vehicle with a blood alcohol content (BAC)
of 0.08 percent by volume (0.08 grams per 100 milliliters) or higher or
in violation of the law of the jurisdiction that is being assimilated
on the military installation.
(iii) Operating a motor vehicle with a BAC of 0.05 percent by
volume but less than 0.08 percent blood alcohol by volume in violation
of the law of the jurisdiction in which the vehicle is being operated
if the jurisdiction imposes a suspension solely on the basis of the BAC
level (as measured in grams per 100 milliliters).
(iv) On an arrest report or other official documentation of the
circumstances of an apprehension for intoxicated driving.
(b) Revocation. (1) The revocation of installation or overseas
command POV driving privileges is a severe administrative measure to be
exercised for serious moving violations or when other available
corrective actions fail to produce the desired driver improvement.
Revocation of the driving privilege will be for a specified period, but
never less than six months, applies at all military installations, and
remains in effect upon reassignment.
(2) Driving privileges are subject to revocation when an individual
fails to comply with any of the conditions requisite to the granting
privilege (see Sec. 634.6). Revocation of installation driving and
registration privileges is authorized for military personnel, family
members, civilian employees of DOD, contractors, and other individuals
with installation driving privileges. For civilian guests, revocation
is authorized only with respect to incidents occurring on the
installation or in the areas subject to military traffic supervision.
(3) Driving privileges will be revoked for a mandatory period of
not less than one year in the following circumstances:
(i) The installation commander or designee has determined that the
person lawfully apprehended for driving under the influence refused to
submit to or complete a test to measure the alcohol content in the
blood, or detect the
[[Page 78994]]
presence of any other drug, as required by the law of the jurisdiction,
or installation traffic code, or by Service directive.
(ii) A conviction, non-judicial punishment, or a military or
civilian administrative action resulting in the suspension or
revocation of driver's license for intoxicated driving. Appropriate
official documentation of such conviction is required as the basis for
revocation.
(4) When temporary suspensions under paragraph (a)(3) of this
section are followed by revocations, the period of revocation is
computed beginning from the date the original suspension was imposed,
exclusive of any period during which full driving privileges may have
been restored pending resolution of charges. (Example: Privileges were
initially suspended on January 1, 2000 for a charge of intoxicated
driving with a BAC of 0.14 percent. A hearing was held, extreme family
hardship was substantiated, and privileges were restored on February 1
pending resolution of the charge. On March 1, 2000, the driver was
convicted for intoxicated driving. The mandatory 1-year revocation
period will consist of January 2000 plus March 2000 through January
2001, for a total of 12 months with no installation driving
privileges).
(c) Army provost marshals will use the automated VRS to develop and
maintain records showing that an individual's driving privileges have
been revoked.
Sec. 634.10 Remedial driver training programs.
(a) Navy activities will comply with OPNAVINST 5100.12 Series, and
Marine Corps activities with current edition of MCO 5100.19C for
establishment of remedial training programs.
(b) Installation commanders may establish a remedial driver-
training program to instruct and educate personnel requiring additional
training. Personnel may be referred to a remedial program on the basis
of their individual driving history or incidents requiring additional
training. The curriculum should provide instruction to improve driving
performance and compliance with traffic laws.
(c) Installation/unit commanders will direct attendance at an Army
Traffic Safety Training Program remedial driving class for any person
who has acquired more than five but less than twelve traffic points
within a six-month period. Commanders can refer to sections below for
detailed determination of points per infraction. Personnel may be
referred to a remedial program on the basis of their individual driving
history or incidents requiring additional training.
(d) Installation commanders may schedule periodic courses, or if
not practical, arrange for participation in courses conducted by local
civil authorities.
(e) Active Duty Soldiers and Department of the Army (DA) Civilians
required to drive Government owned vehicles may attend remedial courses
on the installation, or similar courses off the installation, which
incur no expense to the Government. Contractor employees and family
members of military personnel will attend similar remedial courses off
the installation, which incur no expense to the Government.
(f) Commanders will require individuals, inside or outside normal
duty hours, to attend the courses or lose installation driving
privileges.
(g) State approved driver improvement programs may be used to
fulfill the requirement where an Army standardized course is not
provided.
Sec. 634.11 Administrative due process for suspensions and
revocations.
(a) Individual Services will promulgate separate regulations
establishing administrative due process procedures for suspension or
revocation of driving privileges. The procedures in paragraphs (b) and
(c) of this section apply to actions taken by Army commanders with
respect to Army military personnel and family members and to civilian
personnel operating motor vehicles on Army installations. For Marine
Corps users, the provisions of this section apply. For Air Force users,
a preliminary suspension for intoxicated driving remains in effect
until the installation commander makes a final decision. Requested
hearings must take place within a reasonable period, which is
determined by the installation commander.
(b) For offenses other than intoxicated driving, suspension or
revocation of the installation driving privilege will not become
effective until the installation commander or designee notifies the
affected person and offers that person an administrative hearing.
Suspension or revocation will take place 14 calendar days after written
notice is received unless the affected person makes an application for
a hearing within this period. Such application will stay the pending
suspension or revocation for a period of 14 calendar days.
(1) If, due to action by the government, a hearing is not held
within 14 calendar days, the suspension will not take place until such
time as the person is granted a hearing and is notified of the action
of the installation commander or designee. However, if the affected
person requests that the hearing be continued to a date beyond the 14-
day period, the suspension or revocation will become effective
immediately on receipt of notice that the request for continuance has
been granted, and remain in force pending a hearing at a scheduled
hearing date.
(2) If it is determined as a result of a hearing to suspend or
revoke the affected person's driving privilege, the suspension or
revocation will become effective when the person receives the written
notification of such action. In the event that written notification
cannot be verified, either through a return receipt for mail or
delivery through command channels, the hearing authority will determine
the effective date on a case-by-case basis.
(3) If the revocation or suspension is imposed after such hearing,
the person whose driving privilege has been suspended or revoked will
have the right to appeal or request reconsideration. Such requests must
be forwarded through command channels to the installation commander
within 14 calendar days from the date the individual is notified of the
suspension or revocation resulting from the administrative hearing. The
suspension or revocation will remain in effect pending a final ruling
on the request. Requests for restricted privileges will be considered
per Sec. 634.15.
(4) If driving privileges are temporarily restored (i.e. for family
hardship) pending resolution of charges, the period of revocation
(after final authority determination) will still total the mandatory 12
months. The final date of the revocation will be adjusted to account
for the period when the violator's privileges were temporarily
restored, as this period does not count towards the revocation time.
(c) For drunk driving or driving under the influence offenses,
reliable evidence readily available will be presented promptly to an
individual designated by the installation commander for review and
authorization for immediate suspension of installation driving
privileges.
(1) The reviewer should be any officer to include GS-11 and above,
designated in writing by the installation or garrison commander whose
primary duties are not in the field of law enforcement.
(2) Reliable evidence includes witness statements, military or
civilian police report of apprehension, chemical test results if
completed, refusal to consent to complete chemical testing, videotapes,
statements by the
[[Page 78995]]
apprehended individual, field sobriety or preliminary breath tests
results, and other pertinent evidence. Immediate suspension should not
be based solely on published lists of arrested persons, statements by
parties not witnessing the apprehension, or telephone conversations or
other information not supported by documented and reliable evidence.
(3) Reviews normally will be accomplished within the first normal
duty day following final assembly of evidence.
(4) Installation commanders may authorize the installation law
enforcement officer to conduct reviews and authorize suspensions in
cases where the designated reviewer is not reasonably available and, in
the judgment of the installation law enforcement officer, such
immediate action is warranted. Air Force Security Forces personnel act
in an advisory capacity to installation commanders. Review by the
designated officer will follow as soon as practical in such cases. When
a suspension notice is based on the law enforcement officer's review,
there is no requirement for confirmation notice following subsequent
review by the designated officer.
(5) For active duty military personnel, final written notice of
suspension for intoxicated driving will be provided to the individual's
chain of command for immediate presentation to the individual. Air
Force Security Forces provide a copy of the temporary suspension to the
individual at the time of the incident or may provide a copy of the
final determination at the time of the incident, as pre-determined by
the final action authority.
(6) For civilian personnel, written notice of suspension for
intoxicated driving will normally be provided without delay via
certified mail. Air Force Security Forces personnel provide a copy of
the temporary suspension to the individual at the time of the incident
or may provide a copy of the final determination at the time of the
incident, as pre-determined by the final action authority. If the
person is employed on the installation, such notice will be forwarded
through the military or civilian supervisor. When the notice of
suspension is forwarded through the supervisor, the person whose
privileges are suspended will be required to provide written
acknowledgment of receipt of the suspension notice.
(7) Notices of suspension for intoxicated driving will include the
following:
(i) The fact that the suspension can be made a revocation under
Sec. 634.9(b).
(ii) The right to request, in writing, a hearing before the
installation commander or designee to determine if post driving
privileges will be restored pending resolution of the charge; and that
such request must be made within 14 calendar days of the final notice
of suspension.
(iii) The right of military personnel to be represented by counsel
at his or her own expense and to present evidence and witnesses at his
or her own expense. Installation commanders will determine the
availability of any local active duty representatives requested.
(iv) The right of Department of Defense civilian employees to have
a personal representative present at the administrative hearing in
accordance with applicable laws and regulations.
(v) Written acknowledgment of receipt to be signed by the
individual whose privileges are to be suspended or revoked.
(8) If a hearing is requested, it must take place within 14
calendar days of receipt of the request. The suspension for intoxicated
driving will remain in effect until a decision has been made by the
installation commander or designee, but will not exceed 14 calendar
days after the hearing while awaiting the decision. If no decision has
been made by that time, full driving privileges will be restored until
such time as the accused is notified of a decision to continue the
suspension.
(9) Hearing on suspension actions under Sec. 634.9(a) for drunk or
impaired driving pending resolution of charges will cover only the
following pertinent issues of whether--
(i) The law enforcement official had reasonable grounds to believe
the person was driving or in actual physical control of a motor vehicle
under the influence of alcohol or other drugs.
(ii) The person was lawfully cited or apprehended for a driving
under the influence offense.
(iii) The person was lawfully requested to submit his or her blood,
breath, or urine in order to determine the content of alcohol or other
drugs, and was informed of the implied consent policy (consequences of
refusal to take or complete the test).
(iv) The person refused to submit to the test for alcohol or other
drug content of blood, breath, or urine; failed to complete the test;
submitted to the test and the result was 0.08 or higher blood alcohol
content, or between 0.05 and 0.08 in violation of the law of the
jurisdiction in which the vehicle in being operated if the jurisdiction
imposes a suspension solely on the basis of the BAC level; or showed
results indicating the presence of other drugs for an on-post
apprehension or in violation of State laws for an off-post
apprehension.
(v) The testing methods were valid and reliable and the results
accurately evaluated.
(10) For revocation actions under Sec. 634.9(b)(3) for intoxicated
driving, the revocation is mandatory on conviction or other findings
that confirm the charge. (Pleas of ``nolo contendere'' are considered
equivalent to guilty pleas).
(i) Revocations are effective as of the date of conviction or other
findings that confirm the charges. Test refusal revocations will be in
addition to any other revocation incurred during a hearing. Hearing
authority will determine if revocations for multiple offenses will run
consecutively or concurrently taking into consideration if offenses
occurred on same occasion or different times, dates. The exception is
that test refusal will be one year automatic revocation in addition to
any other suspension.
(ii) The notice that revocation is automatic may be placed in the
suspension letter. If it does not appear in the suspension letter, a
separate letter must be sent and revocation is not effective until
receipt of the written notice.
(iii) Revocations cancel any full or restricted driving privileges
that may have been restored during suspension and the resolution of the
charges. Requests for restoration of full driving privileges are not
authorized.
(11) The Army Vehicle Registration System will be utilized to
maintain infractions by individuals on Army installations.
Sec. 634.12 Army administrative actions against intoxicated drivers.
Army commanders will take appropriate action against intoxicated
drivers. These actions may include the following:
(a) A written reprimand, administrative in nature, will be issued
to active duty Soldiers in the cases described in this paragraph. Any
general officer, and any officer frocked to the grade of brigadier
general, may issue this reprimand. Filing of the reprimand will be in
accordance with the provisions of AR 600-37.
(1) Conviction by courts-martial or civilian court or imposition of
non-judicial punishment for an offense of drunk or impaired driving
either on or off the installation.
(2) Refusal to take or failure to complete a lawfully requested
test to measure alcohol or drug content of the
[[Page 78996]]
blood, breath, or urine, either on or off the installation, when there
is reasonable belief of driving under the influence of alcohol or
drugs.
(3) Driving or being in physical control of a motor vehicle or
watercraft (as described above) on post when the blood alcohol content
is 0.08 percent or higher, irrespective of other charges, or either on
or off post when the blood alcohol content is in violation of the law
of the State involved.
(4) Driving, or being in physical control of a motor vehicle,
either on or off the installation, when lawfully conducted chemical
tests reflect the presence of illegal drugs.
(b) Review by the commander of the service records of active duty
soldiers apprehended for offenses described in paragraph (a) of this
section to determine if the following action(s) should be taken--
(1) Administrative reduction per AR 600-8-19; or
(2) Bar to reenlistment per AR 601-280; or
(3) Administrative separation per AR 635-200.
(c) Federal civilian employees may be subject to administrative
actions in accordance with 5 CFR part 752.
Sec. 634.13 Alcohol and drug abuse programs.
(a) Commanders will refer military personnel suspected of drug or
alcohol abuse for evaluation in the following circumstances:
(1) Behavior indicative of alcohol or drug abuse.
(2) Continued inability to drive a motor vehicle safely because of
alcohol or drug abuse.
(b) The commander will ensure military personnel are referred to
the installation alcohol and drug abuse program or other comparable
facilities when they are convicted of, or receive an official
administrative action for, any offense involving driving under the
influence. A first offender may be referred to treatment if evidence of
substance abuse exists in addition to the offense of intoxicated
driving. The provisions of this paragraph do not limit the commander's
prerogatives concerning other actions that may be taken against an
offender under separate Service/Agency polices (Army, see AR 600-85.
Marine Corps, see MCO P1700.24B).
(c) Active duty Army personnel apprehended for drunk driving, on or
off the installation, will be referred to the local Army Substance
Abuse Program (ASAP) for evaluation within 14 calendar days to
determine if the person is dependent on alcohol or other drugs which
will result in enrollment in treatment in accordance with AR 600-85. A
copy of all reports on military personnel and DOD civilian employees
apprehended for intoxicated driving will be forwarded to the
installation alcohol and drug abuse facility.
(d) Active duty Navy personnel apprehended for drunk driving on or
off the installation will be screened by the respective SARP facility
within 14 calendar days to determine if the individual is dependent on
alcohol or other drugs. Active duty Marines apprehended for intoxicated
driving, on or off the installation, will be referred to interview by a
Level II substance abuse counselor within 14 calendar days for
evaluation and determination of the appropriate level of treatment
required. Subsequent to this evaluation, the Marine will be assigned to
the appropriate treatment programs as prescribed by MCO P1700.24B.
(e) The Services/Agencies may develop preventive treatment and
rehabilitative programs for civilian employees with alcohol-related
problems.
(f) Army supervisors of civilian employees apprehended for
intoxicated driving will advise employees of ASAP services available.
Civilian employees apprehended for intoxicated driving while on duty
will be referred to the ASAP or comparable facility for evaluation in
accordance with AR 600-85. Army commanders will ensure that sponsors
encourage family members apprehended for drunk driving seek ASAP
evaluation and assistance.
(g) Navy and DLA civilian personnel charged with intoxicated
driving will be referred to the Civilian Employee Assistance Program in
accordance with 5 CFR part 792. Such referral does not exempt the
employee from appropriate administrative or disciplinary actions under
civilian personnel regulations.
(h) Marine Corps civilian employees charged with intoxicated
driving, on or off the installation, will be referred to the Employee
Assistance Program as prescribed by MCO P1700.24B. Marine family
members charged with intoxicated driving, on or off the installation,
will be provided assistance as addressed in MCO P1700.24B. Such
referral and assistance does not exempt the individual from appropriate
administrative or disciplinary action under current civilian personnel
regulations or State laws.
(i) For the Army, DLA, and the Marine Corps, installation driving
privileges of any person who refuses to submit to, or fails to
complete, chemical testing for blood-alcohol content when apprehended
for intoxicated driving, or convicted of intoxicated driving, will not
be reinstated unless the person successfully completes either an
alcohol education or treatment program sponsored by the installation,
state, county, or municipality, or other program evaluated as
acceptable by the installation commander.
(j) Active duty Air Force personnel apprehended for drunk driving,
on or off the installation, will be referred by their respective chain
of command to the Air Force Substance Abuse office for evaluation in
accordance with AFI 44-121/Alcohol Drug Abuse & Treatment Program, and
local policies within seven days.
(k) Local installation commanders will determine if active duty Air
Force personnel involved in any alcohol incident will immediately be
subjected to a urinalysis for drug content. If consent is not given for
the test, a command-directed test will be administered in accordance
with local policies.
Sec. 634.14 Restoration of driving privileges upon acquittal of
intoxicated driving.
The suspension of driving privileges for military and civilian
personnel shall be restored if a final disposition indicates a finding
of not guilty, charges are dismissed or reduced to an offense not
amounting to intoxicated driving, or where an equivalent determination
is made in a non-judicial proceeding. The following are exceptions to
the rule in which suspensions will continue to be enforced.
(a) The preliminary suspension was based on refusal to take a BAC
test.
(b) The preliminary suspension resulted from a valid BAC test,
(unless disposition of the charges was based on invalidity of the BAC
test). In the case of a valid BAC test, the suspension will continue,
pending completion of a hearing as specified in Sec. 634.11. In such
instances, the individual will be notified in writing that the
suspension will continue and of the opportunity to request a hearing
within 14 calendar days.
(1) At the hearing, the arrest report, the commander's report of
official disposition, information presented by the individual, and such
other information as the hearing officer may deem appropriate will be
considered.
(2) If the hearing officer determines by a preponderance of
evidence that the individual was engaged in intoxicated driving, the
revocation will be for 1 year from the date of the original preliminary
suspension.
(c) The person was driving or in physical control of a motor
vehicle
[[Page 78997]]
while under a preliminary suspension or revocation.
(d) An administrative determination has been made by the state or
host nation licensing authority to suspend or revoke driving
privileges.
(e) The individual has failed to complete a formally directed
substance abuse or driver's training program.
Sec. 634.15 Restricted driving privileges or probation.
(a) For the Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and DLA, the
installation commander, or his or her designee may modify a suspension
or revocation of driving privileges in certain cases per paragraph (d)
of this section.
(b) Army requests for restricted driving privileges subsequent to
suspension or revocation of installation driving privileges will be
referred to the installation commander or designee, except for
intoxicated driving cases, which must be referred to the General Court
Martial Convening Authority. Withdrawal of restricted driving
privileges is within the installation commander's discretion.
(c) Probation or restricted driving privileges will not be granted
to any person whose driver license or right to operate motor vehicles
is under suspension or revocation by a state, Federal, or host nation
licensing authority. Prior to application for probation or restricted
driving privileges, a state, Federal, or host nation driver's license
or right to operate motor vehicles must be reinstated. The burden of
proof for reinstatement of driving privileges lies with the person
applying for probation or restricted driving privileges. Revocations
for test refusals shall remain.
(d) The installation commander or designee may grant restricted
driving privileges or probation on a case-by-case basis provided the
person's state or host nation driver's license or right to operate
motor vehicles remains valid to accommodate any of the following
reasons:
(1) Mission requirements.
(2) Unusual personal or family hardships.
(3) Delays exceeding 90 days, not attributed to the person
concerned, in the formal disposition of an apprehension or charges that
are the basis for any type of suspension or revocation.
(4) When there is no reasonably available alternate means of
transportation to officially assigned duties. In this instance, a
limited exception can be granted for the sole purpose of driving
directly to and from the place of duty.
(e) The terms and limitations on a restricted driving privilege
(for example, authorization to drive to and from place of employment or
duty, or selected installation facilities such as hospital, commissary,
and or other facilities) will be specified in writing and provided to
the individual concerned. Persons found in violation of the restricted
privilege are subject to revocation action as prescribed in Sec.
634.9.
(f) The conditions and terms of probation will be specified in
writing and provided to the individual concerned. The original
suspension or revocation term in its entirety may be activated to
commence from the date of the violation of probation. In addition,
separate action may be initiated based on the commission of any
traffic, criminal, or military offense that constitutes a probation
violation.
(g) DOD employees and contractors, who can demonstrate that
suspension or revocation of installation driving privileges would
constructively remove them from employment, may be given a limiting
suspension/revocation that restricts driving on the installation or
activity (or in the overseas command) to the most direct route to and
from their respective work sites (5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(10)). This is not to
be construed as limiting the commander from suspension or revocation of
on-duty driving privileges or seizure of Optional Form (OF) 346, U.S.
Government Motor Vehicle Operator's Identification Card even if this
action would constructively remove a person from employment in those
instances in which the person's duty requires driving from place to
place on the installation.
Sec. 634.16 Reciprocal State-Military action.
(a) Commanders will recognize the interests of the states in
matters of POV administration and driver licensing. Statutory authority
may exist within some states or host nations for reciprocal suspension
and revocation of driving privileges. See subpart D of this part for
additional information on exchanging and obtaining information with
civilian law enforcement agencies concerning infractions by Armed
Service personnel off post. Installation commanders will honor the
reciprocal authority and direct the installation law enforcement
officer to pursue reciprocity with state or host nation licensing
authorities. Upon receipt of written or other official law enforcement
communication relative to the suspension/revocation of driving
privileges, the receiving installation will terminate driving
privileges as if violations occurred within its own jurisdiction.
(b) When imposing a suspension or revocation for an off-
installation offense, the effective date should be the same as civil
disposition, or the date that state or host-nation driving privileges
are suspended or revoked. This effective date can be retroactive.
(c) If statutory authority does not exist within the state or host
nation for formal military reciprocity, the procedures below will be
adopted:
(1) Commanders will recognize official documentation of
suspensions/revocations imposed by state or host nation authorities.
Administrative actions (suspension/revocations, or if recognized, point
assessment) for moving traffic violations off the installation should
not be less than required for similar offenses on the installation.
When notified by state or host nation authorities of a suspension or
revocation, the person's OF 346 may also be suspended.
(2) In CONUS locations, the host and issuing state licensing
authority will be notified as soon as practical when a person's
installation driving privileges are suspended or revoked for any
period, and immediately for refusal to submit to a lawful BAC test. The
notification will be sent to the appropriate state DMV(s) per
reciprocal agreements. In the absence of electronic communication
technology, the appropriate state DMV(s) will be notified by official
certified mail. The notification will include the basis for the
suspension/revocation and the BAC level if applicable.
(d) In OCONUS locations, installation commanders must follow
provisions of the applicable Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), the law
of the host nation concerning reciprocal suspension and revocation, and
other international agreements. To the extent an agreement concerning
reciprocity may be permitted at a particular overseas installation, the
commander must have prior authorization to negotiate and conclude such
an international agreement in accordance with applicable international
agreements, DODD 5530.3, International Agreements, June 87, and other
individual Service instructions.
Sec. 634.17 Extensions of suspensions and revocations.
(a) Driving in violation of a suspension or revocation imposed
under this part will result in the original period of suspension or
revocation being increased by two years. In addition, administrative
action may be initiated based on the commission of
[[Page 78998]]
any traffic, criminal, or military offenses, for example, active duty
military personnel driving on the installation in violation of a lawful
order.
(b) For each subsequent determination within a five-year period
that revocation is authorized under Sec. 634.9, military personnel,
DOD civilians, contractors and NAF employees will be prohibited from
obtaining or using an OF 346 for six months for each such incident. A
determination whether DOD civilian personnel should be prohibited from
obtaining or using an OF 346 will be made in accordance with the laws
and regulations applicable to civilian personnel. This does not
preclude a commander from imposing such prohibition for a first
offense, or for a longer period of time for a first or subsequent
offense, or for such other reasons as may be authorized.
(c) Commanders may extend a suspension or revocation of driving
privileges on personnel until completion of an approved remedial driver
training course or alcohol or drug counseling programs after proof is
provided.
(d) Commanders may extend a suspension or revocation of driving
privileges on civilian personnel convicted of intoxicated driving on
the installation until successful completion of a state or installation
approved alcohol or drug rehabilitation program.
(e) For Navy personnel for good cause, the appropriate authority
may withdraw the restricted driving privilege and continue the
suspension or revocation period (for example, driver at fault in the
traffic accident, or driver cited for a moving violation).
Sec. 634.18 Reinstatement of driving privileges.
Reinstatement of driving privileges shall be automatic, provided
all revocations applicable have expired, proper proof of completion of
remedial driving course and/or substance abuse counseling has been
provided, and reinstatement requirements of individual's home state
and/or state the individual may have been suspended in, have been met.
Subpart C--Motor Vehicle Registration
Sec. 634.19 Registration policy.
(a) Services may require motor vehicle registration according to
guidance in this regulation and in policies of each Service and DLA. A
person who lives or works on an installation or often uses the
facilities may be required to register his or her vehicle. Where
required, individuals who access the installation for regular
activities such as use of medical facilities and regular recurring
activities on the installation should register their vehicles according
to a standard operating procedure established by the installation
commander. The person need not own the vehicle to register it, but must
have a lease agreement, power of attorney, or notarized statement from
the owner of the vehicle specifying the inclusive dates for which
permission to use the vehicle has been granted.
(b) Vehicles intended for construction and material handling, or
used solely off the road, are usually not registered as motor vehicles.
Installation commanders may require registration of off-road vehicles
and bicycles under a separate local system.
(c) Commanders can grant limited temporary registration for up to
30 days, pending permanent registration, or in other circumstances for
longer terms.
(d) DD Form 2220 vehicle decal. The Department of Defense does not
require vehicles entering Department of Defense installations to be
registered via the DD Form 2220 vehicle decal; however installations
may utilize DD Form 2220 for registration at the installation
commander's discretion. All privately owned vehicles (POVs) must
continue to be licensed, registered, inspected, and insured in
accordance with state and local laws.
(e) Rental vehicles are considered POVs for purposes of
installation entry and access control. The vehicle rental contract will
suffice as proper licensing, registration and insurance for
installation access.
(f) Army Installation commanders may establish local visitor
identification for individuals who will be on installation for less
than 30 days. The local policy will provide for use of temporary passes
that establish a start and end date for which the pass is valid. Army
installation commanders must refer to AR 190-13, chapter 8, for
guidance concerning installation access control (Air Force, see AFI 31-
113). Other Armed Services and DLA may develop and issue visitor passes
locally.
(g) The conditions in Sec. 634.20 must be met to operate a POV on
an Army and DLA Installation. Other Armed Services that do not require
registration will enforce Sec. 634.20 through traffic enforcement
actions. Additionally, failure to comply with Sec. 634.20 may result
in administrative suspension or revocation of driving privileges.
Sec. 634.20 Privately Owned Vehicle operation requirements.
Personnel seeking to register their POVs on military installations
within the United States or its territories and in overseas areas will
comply with the following requirements. (Registration in overseas
commands may be modified in accordance with international agreements or
military necessity.)
(a) Possess a valid state, overseas command, host nation or
international drivers license (within appropriate classification),
supported by a DD Form 2-Series Identification Card, or other
appropriate identification for DOD civilians, contractors and retirees.
(b) Possess a certificate of state registration as required by the
state in which the vehicle is registered.
(c) Comply with the minimum requirements of the automobile
insurance laws or regulations of the state or host nation. In overseas
commands where host nation laws do not require minimum personal injury
and property damage liability insurance, the major overseas commander
will set reasonable liability insurance requirements for registration
and/or operation of POVs within the confines of military installations
and areas where the commander exercises jurisdiction. Prior to
implementation, insurance requirements in host states or nations should
be formally coordinated with the appropriate host agency.
(d) Satisfactorily complete a safety and mechanical vehicle
inspection by the state or jurisdiction in which the vehicle is
licensed. If neither state nor local jurisdiction requires a periodic
safety inspection, installation commanders may require and conduct an
annual POV safety inspection; however, inspection facilities must be
reasonably accessible to those requiring use. Inspections will meet
minimum standards established by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA) in 49 CFR part 570. Lights, turn signals, brake
lights, horn, wipers, and pollution control devices and standards in
areas where applicable, should be included in the inspection. Vehicles
modified from factory standards and determined unsafe may be denied
access and registration.
(e) Possess current proof of compliance with local vehicle emission
inspection if required by the state, and maintenance requirements.
(f) Vehicles that have been modified in an unsafe manner, as
determined by an inspection that is consistent with the standards in 49
CFR part 570, will be denied registration.
Sec. 634.21 Department of Defense Form 2220.
(a) Use. The DD Form 2220 may be used to identify registered POVs
on Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps,
[[Page 78999]]
and DLA installations or facilities. The requirement to affix the DD
Form 2220 to the front windshield or bumper of registered vehicles is
waived for general officers and flag officers of all Armed Services,
Armed Service Secretaries, political appointees, members of Congress,
and the diplomatic corps.
(1) Each Service and DLA will procure its own forms and
installation and expiration tabs. For the Army, the basic decal will be
ordered through publications channels and remain on the vehicle until
the registered owner disposes of the vehicle, separates from active
duty or other conditions specified in paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
Air Force, DLA, and Army retirees may retain DD Form 2220. Service
retirees may be required to follow the same registration procedures as
active duty personnel. Upon termination of affiliation with the
Service, the registered owner or authorized operator is responsible for
removing the DD Form 2220 from the vehicle and surrender of the decal
to the issuing office. Service installations requiring registration are
responsible for the costs of procuring decals with the name of their
installation and related expiration tabs.
(2) Services and DLA, will require removal of the DD Form 2220, and
installation and expiration tabs from POVs by the owner prior to
departure from their current installation, retirement, or separation
from military or Government affiliation, termination of ownership,
registration, liability insurance, or other conditions further
identified by local policy.
(b) Specifications. (1) DD Form 2220 and installation and
expiration tabs will consist of international blue borders and printing
on a white background. Printer information will include the following:
(i) Form title (Department of Defense Registered Vehicle).
(ii) Alphanumeric individual form identification number.
(iii) DOD seal.
(2) Name of the installation will be specified on a separate tab
abutting the decal. Each Service or DLA may choose optional color codes
for the registrant. Army and installations having vehicle registration
programs will use the following standard color scheme for the
installation tab:
(i) Blue-officers.
(ii) Red-enlisted.
(iii) Green DA civilian employees (including NAF employees).
(iv) Black-contractor personnel and other civilians employed on the
installation. White will be used for contract personnel on Air Force
installations.
(3) An expiration tab identifying the month and year (6-2004), the
year (2000) or simply ``00'' will be abutted to right of the decal. For
identification purposes, the date of expiration will be shown in bold
block numbers on a lighter contrasting background such as traffic
yellow, lime, or orange.
(4) DD Form 2220 and any adjoining tabs will be theft resistant
when applied to glass, metal, painted, or rubberized surfaces and
manufactured so as to obliterate or self destruct when removal is
attempted. Local policy guided by state or host nation laws will
specify the exact placement of DD Form 2220.
(5) Services may issue military and retired personnel grade
insignia that will be affixed on placards, approximately five inches by
eight inches in size, and placed on the driver's side dashboard.
Placards should be removed from view when the vehicle is not located on
a military installation.
Sec. 634.22 Gold Star decals.
(a) For Army installations only, a serial-numbered Gold Star
vehicle identification decal may be issued in accordance with guidance
from the Army's Office of the Assistant Chief of Staff for Installation
Management. The decals may be obtained through Army installation
Survivor Outreach Services and may serve as a temporary vehicle
registration in accordance with DoD security standards.
(b) Gold Star decals issued to identify Surviving Family Members of
deceased Soldiers may be used to identify POVs and expedite processing
for installation access.
(c) Gold Star decals do not exempt vehicles and passengers from DOD
and Army installation access screening procedures.
(d) A physical and visual inspection of ID cards shall be conducted
by security forces when required for installation access.
Sec. 634.23 Termination or denial of registration.
Installation commanders or their designated representatives will
terminate POV registration or deny initial registration under the
following conditions (decal and tabs will be removed from the vehicle
when registration is terminated):
(a) The owner fails to comply with the registration requirements.
(b) The owner sells or disposes of the POV, is released from active
duty, separated from the Service, or terminates civilian employment
with a military Service or DOD agency. Army and Air Force personnel on
a permanent change of station will retain the DD Form 2220 if the
vehicle is moved to their new duty station.
(c) The owner is other than an active duty military or civilian
employee and discontinues regular operations of the POV on the
installation.
(d) The owner's state, overseas command, or host nation driver's
license is suspended or revoked, or the installation driving privilege
is revoked. Air Force does not require removal of the DD Form 2220 when
driving privileges are suspended for an individual. When vehicle
registration is terminated in conjunction with the revocation of
installation driving privileges, the affected person must apply to re-
register the POV after the revocation expires. Registration should not
be terminated if other family members having installation driving
privileges require use of the vehicle.
Sec. 634.24 Specified consent to impoundment.
Personnel registering POVs on DOD installations must consent to the
impoundment policy. POV registration forms will contain or have
appended to them a certificate with the following statement: ``I am
aware that (insert number and title of separate Service or DLA
directive) and the installation traffic code provide for the removal
and temporary impoundment of privately owned motor vehicles that are
either parked illegally, or for unreasonable periods, interfering with
military operations, creating a safety hazard, disabled by accident,
left unattended in a restricted or control area, or abandoned. I agree
to reimburse the United States for the cost of towing and storage
should my motor vehicle(s), because of such circumstances, be removed
and impounded.''
Subpart D--Traffic Supervision
Sec. 634.25 Traffic planning and codes.
(a) Safe and efficient movement of traffic on an installation
requires traffic supervision. A traffic supervision program includes
traffic circulation planning and control of motor vehicle traffic;
publication and enforcement of traffic laws and regulations; and
investigation of motor vehicle accidents.
(b) Installation commanders will develop traffic circulation plans
that provide for the safest and most efficient use of primary and
secondary roads. Circulation planning should be a major part of all
long-range master planning at installations. The traffic circulation
plan is developed by the installation law enforcement officer,
engineer, safety officer, and other concerned staff agencies. Highway
engineering
[[Page 79000]]
representatives from adjacent civil communities must be consulted to
ensure the installation plan is compatible with the current and future
circulation plan of the community. The plan should include the
following:
(1) Normal and peak load routing based on traffic control studies.
(2) Effective control of traffic using planned direction, including
measures for special events and adverse road or weather conditions.
(3) Point control at congested locations by law enforcement
personnel or designated traffic directors or wardens, including trained
school-crossing guards.
(4) Use of traffic control signs and devices.
(5) Efficient use of available parking facilities.
(6) Efficient use of mass transportation.
(c) Traffic control studies will provide factual data on existing
roads, traffic density and flow patterns, and points of congestion. The
installation law enforcement officer and traffic engineer usually
conduct coordinated traffic control studies to obtain the data.
Accurate data will help determine major and minor routes, location of
traffic control devices, and conditions requiring engineering or
enforcement services.
(d) The (Military) Surface Deployment and Distribution Command
Transportation Engineering Agency (SDDCTEA) will help installation
commanders solve complex highway traffic engineering problems. SDDCTEA
traffic engineering services include--
(1) Traffic studies of limited areas and situations.
(2) Complete studies of traffic operations of entire installations.
(This can include long-range planning for future development of
installation roads, public highways, and related facilities.)
(3) Assistance in complying with established traffic engineering
standards.
(e) Installation commanders should submit requests for traffic
engineering services in accordance with applicable service or agency
directives.
Sec. 634.26 Installation traffic codes.
(a) Installation or activity commanders will establish a traffic
code for operation of motor vehicles on the installation. Commanders in
overseas areas will establish a traffic code, under provisions of this
Part, to the extent military authority is empowered to regulate traffic
on the installation under the applicable SOFA. Traffic codes will
contain the rules of the road (parking violations, towing instructions,
safety equipment, and other key provisions). These codes will, where
possible, conform to the code of the State or host nation in which the
installation is located. In addition, the development and publication
of installation traffic codes will be based on the following:
(1) State Highway Safety Program Standards (23 U.S.C. 402).
(2) Applicable portions of the Uniform Vehicle Code and Model
Traffic Ordinance published by the National Committee on Uniform
Traffic Laws and Ordinances.
(b) The installation traffic code will contain policy and
procedures for the towing, searching, impounding, and inventorying of
POVs. These provisions should be well publicized and contain the
following:
(1) Specific violations and conditions under which the POV will be
impounded and towed.
(2) Procedures to immediately notify the vehicle owner.
(3) Procedures for towing and storing impounded vehicles.
(4) Actions to dispose of the vehicle after lawful impoundment.
(5) Violators are responsible for all costs of towing, storage and
impounding of vehicles for other than evidentiary reasons.
(c) Installation traffic codes will also contain the provisions
discussed as follows: (Army users see AR 385-10).
(1) Motorcycles and mopeds. For motorcycles and other self-
propelled, open, two-wheel, three-wheel, and four-wheel vehicles
powered by a motorcycle-type engine, the following traffic rules apply:
(i) Headlights will be on at all times when in operation.
(ii) A rear view mirror will be attached to each side of the
handlebars.
(iii) Approved protective helmets (DOT compliance), eye protection,
sturdy over-the-ankle footwear that affords protection for the feet and
ankles, and protective clothing including long-sleeved shirt or jacket,
long trousers, and full-fingered gloves or mittens made from leather or
other abrasion-resistant material must be worn by operators and
passengers when in operation. Motorcycle jackets and pants constructed
of abrasion-resistant materials such as leather, Kevlar[supreg], or
Cordura[supreg] and containing impact-absorbing padding are strongly
encouraged. Riders are encouraged to select PPE that incorporates
fluorescent colors and retro-reflective material.
(2) Restraint systems. (i) Restraint systems (seat belts) will be
worn by all operators and passengers of U.S. Government vehicles on or
off the installation.
(ii) Restraint systems will be worn by all civilian personnel
(including family members, guests, and visitors) driving or riding in a
POV on the installation.
(iii) Restraint systems will be worn by all military service
members and Reserve Component members on active Federal service driving
or riding in a POV whether on or off the installation.
(iv) Each occupant riding in a passenger motor vehicle who is under
eight years of age, weighs less than 65 pounds and is less than four
feet, nine inches in height must be secured in an age-appropriate child
restraint.
(v) Restraint systems are required only in vehicles manufactured
after model year 1966.
(3) Driver Distractions. Vehicle operators on a DoD installation
and operators of Government owned vehicles, as well as Federal
employees (including service members) operating a POV on official
government business or using electronic equipment provided by the
Government while driving, will not use a personal wireless
communication device, including for text messaging or any other form of
electronic data retrieval or electronic data communication, unless the
vehicle is safely parked or unless they are using a hands-free device.
The wearing of any other portable headphones, earphones, or other
listening devices (except for hands-free use of cellular phones) while
operating a motor vehicle is prohibited. Use of those devices impairs
driving and masks or prevents recognition of emergency signals, alarms,
announcements, the approach of vehicles, and human speech. The DOD
component safety guidance should note the potential for driver
distractions such as eating and drinking, operating radios, CD players,
global positioning equipment, and so on. Whenever possible this should
only be done when the vehicle is safely parked.
(d) Only administrative actions (reprimand, assessment of points,
loss of on-post driving privileges, or other actions) will be initiated
against service members for off-post violations of the installation
traffic code.
(e) In States where traffic law violations are State criminal
offenses, such laws are made applicable under the provisions of 18
U.S.C. 13 to military installations having concurrent or exclusive
Federal jurisdiction.
(f) In those States where violations of traffic law are not
considered criminal offenses and cannot be assimilated under 18 U.S.C.,
DODD 5525.4, enclosure 1 expressly adopts the vehicular and pedestrian
traffic laws of
[[Page 79001]]
such States and makes these laws applicable to military installations
having concurrent or exclusive Federal jurisdiction. It also delegates
authority to installation commanders to establish additional vehicular
and pedestrian traffic rules and regulations for their installations.
Persons found guilty of violating the vehicular and pedestrian traffic
laws made applicable on the installation under provisions of that
directive are subject to a fine as determined by the local magistrate
or imprisonment for not more than 30 days, or both, for each violation.
In those States where traffic laws cannot be assimilated, an extract
copy of this paragraph (f) and a copy of the delegation memorandum in
DODD 5525.4, enclosure 1, will be posted in a prominent place
accessible to persons assigned, living, or working on the installation.
(g) In those States where violations of traffic laws cannot be
assimilated because the Federal Government's jurisdictional authority
on the installation or parts of the installation is only proprietary,
neither 18 U.S.C. 13 nor the delegation memorandum in DoDD 5525.4,
enclosure 1, will permit enforcement of the State's traffic laws in
Federal courts. Law enforcement authorities on those military
installations must rely on either administrative sanctions related to
the installation driving privilege or enforcement of traffic laws by
State law enforcement authorities.
Sec. 634.27 Traffic law enforcement principles.
(a) Traffic law enforcement should motivate drivers to operate
vehicles safely within traffic laws and regulations and maintain an
effective and efficient flow of traffic. Effective enforcement should
emphasize voluntary compliance by drivers and can be achieved by the
following actions:
(1) Publishing a realistic traffic code well known by all
personnel.
(2) Adopting standard signs, markings, and signals in accordance
with NHSPS and the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for
Streets and Highways.
(3) Ensuring enforcement personnel establish courteous, personal
contact with drivers and act promptly when driving behavior is improper
or a defective vehicle is observed in operation.
(4) Maintaining an aggressive program to detect and apprehend
persons who drive while privileges are suspended or revoked.
(5) Using sound discretion and judgment in deciding when to
apprehend, issue citations, or warn the offender.
(b) Selective enforcement will be used when practical. Selective
enforcement deters traffic violations and reduces accidents by the
presence or suggested presence of law enforcement personnel at places
where violations, congestion, or accidents frequently occur. Selective
enforcement applies proper enforcement measures to traffic congestion
and focuses on selected time periods, conditions, and violations that
cause accidents. Law enforcement personnel use selective enforcement
because that practice is the most effective use of resources.
(c) Enforcement activities against intoxicated driving will
include--
(1) Detecting, apprehending, and testing persons suspected of
driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
(2) Training law enforcement personnel in special enforcement
techniques.
(3) Enforcing blood-alcohol concentration standards. (See Sec.
634.35).
(4) Denying installation driving privileges to persons whose use of
alcohol or other drugs prevents safe operation of a motor vehicle.
(d) Installation officials will formally evaluate traffic
enforcement on a regular basis. That evaluation will examine procedures
to determine if the following elements of the program are effective in
reducing traffic accidents and deaths:
(1) Selective enforcement measures;
(2) Suspension and revocation actions; and
(3) Chemical breath-testing programs.
Sec. 635.28 Speed-measuring devices.
Speed-measuring devices will be used in traffic control studies and
enforcement programs. Signs may be posted to indicate speed-measuring
devices are being used.
(a) Equipment purchases. Installations will ensure operators attend
an appropriate training program for the equipment in use.
(b) Training and certification standards. (1) The commander of each
installation using traffic radar will ensure that personnel selected as
operators of such devices meet training and certification requirements
prescribed by the State (or SOFA) in which the installation is located.
Specific information on course dates, costs, and prerequisites for
attending may be obtained by contacting the State agency responsible
for police traffic radar training.
(2) Installation commanders located in States or overseas areas
where no formal training program exists, or where the military
personnel are unable or ineligible to participate in police traffic
radar training programs, may implement their own training program or
use a selected civilian institution or manufacturer's course.
(3) The objective of the civilian or manufacturer-sponsored course
is to improve the effectiveness of speed enforcement through the proper
and efficient use of speed-measurement radar. On successful completion,
the course graduate must be able to--
(i) Describe the association between excessive speed and accidents,
deaths, and injuries, and describe the traffic safety benefits of
effective speed control.
(ii) Describe the basic principles of radar speed measurement.
(iii) Identify and describe the Service's policy and procedures
affecting radar speed measurement and speed enforcement.
(iv) Identify the specific radar instrument used and describe the
instrument's major components and functions.
(v) Demonstrate basic skills in checking calibration and operating
the specific radar instrument(s).
(vi) Demonstrate basic skills in preparing and presenting records
and courtroom testimony relating to radar speed measurement and
enforcement.
(c) Recertification. Recertification of operators will occur every
three years, or as prescribed by State law.
Sec. 634.29 Traffic accident investigation.
Installation law enforcement personnel must make detailed
investigations of accidents described in this section:
(a) Accidents involving Government vehicles or Government property
on the installation involving a fatality, personal injury, or estimated
property damage in the amount established by separate Service/DLA
policy. (Minimum damage limits are: Army, $1,000; Air Force, as
specified by the installation commander; Navy and Marine Corps, $500.)
The installation motor pool will provide current estimates of the cost
of repairs. Investigations of off-installation accidents involving
Government vehicles will be made in cooperation with the civilian law
enforcement agency.
(b) POV accidents on the installation involving a fatality,
personal injury, or when a POV is inoperable as a result of an
accident.
(c) Any accident prescribed within a SOFA agreement.
[[Page 79002]]
Sec. 634.30 Traffic accident investigation reports.
(a) Accidents requiring immediate reports. The driver or owner of
any vehicle involved in an accident, as described in Sec. 634.29, on
the installation, must immediately notify the installation law
enforcement office. The operator of any Government vehicle involved in
a similar accident off the installation must immediately notify the
local civilian law enforcement agency having jurisdiction, as well as
law enforcement personnel of the nearest military installation.
(b) Investigation records. Installation law enforcement officials
will record traffic accident investigations on Service/DLA forms.
Information will be released according to Service/DLA policy, the
Privacy Act, and the Freedom of Information Act.
(c) Army law enforcement officers. These officers provide the
Department of the Army local Safety Office copies of traffic accident
investigation reports pertaining to accidents investigated by military
police that resulted in a fatality, personal injury, or estimated
damage to Government vehicles or property in excess of $1,000.
(d) POV accidents not addressed in Sec. 634.29. Guidance for
reporting these cases is provided as follows:
(1) Drivers or owners of POVs will be required to submit a written
report to the installation law enforcement office within 24 hours of an
accident in the following cases, with all information listed in
paragraph (d)(3) of this section:
(i) The accident occurs on the installation.
(ii) The accident involves no personal injury.
(iii) The accident involves only minor damage to the POV and the
vehicle can be safely and normally driven from the scene under its own
power.
(2) Information in the written report cannot be used in criminal
proceedings against the person submitting it unless it was originally
categorized a hit and run and the violator is the person submitting the
report. Rights advisement will be given prior to any criminal traffic
statements provided by violators. Within the United States, the
installation law enforcement official may require such reporting on
Service forms or forms of the State jurisdiction.
(3) Reports required in paragraph (d)(1) of this section by the
Army will include the following about the accident:
(i) Location, date, and time.
(ii) Identification of all drivers, pedestrians, and passengers
involved.
(iii) Identification of vehicles involved.
(iv) Speed and direction of travel of each vehicle involved,
including a sketch of the collision and roadway with street names and
north arrow.
(v) Property damage involved.
(vi) Environmental conditions at the time of the incident (weather,
visibility, road surface condition, and other factors).
(vii) A narrative description of the events and circumstances
concerning the accident.
Sec. 634.31 Use of traffic accident investigation report data.
(a) Data derived from traffic accident investigation reports and
from vehicle owner accident reports will be analyzed to determine
probable causes of accidents. When frequent accidents occur at a
location, the conditions at the location and the types of accidents
(collision diagram) will be examined.
(b) Law enforcement personnel and others who prepare traffic
accident investigation reports will document on DA Form 3975, Military
Police Report or other Service equivalent, whether or not seat
restraint devices were being used at the time of the accident.
(c) When accidents warrant, an installation commander may establish
a traffic accident review board. The board will consist of law
enforcement, engineer, safety, medical, and legal personnel. The board
will determine principal factors leading to the accident and recommend
measures to reduce the number and severity of accidents on and off the
installation. (The Air Force will use Traffic Safety Coordinating
Groups. The Navy will use Traffic Safety Councils per OPNAVINST 5100.12
Series).
(d) Data will be shared with the installation legal, engineer,
safety, and transportation officers. The data will be used to inform
and educate drivers and to conduct traffic engineering studies.
(e) Army traffic accident investigation reports will be provided to
Army Centralized Accident Investigation of Ground Accidents (CAIG)
boards on request. The CAIG boards are under the control of the
Commander, U.S. Army Safety Center, Fort Rucker, AL 36362-5363. These
boards investigate Class A, on-duty, non-POV accidents and other
selected accidents Army-wide (See AR 385-40). Local commanders provide
additional board members as required to complete a timely and accurate
investigation. Normally, additional board members are senior equipment
operators, maintenance officers, and medical officers. However,
specific qualifications of the additional board members may be dictated
by the nature of the accident.
(f) The CAIG program is not intended to interfere with, impede, or
delay law enforcement agencies in the execution of regulatory
responsibilities that apply to the investigation of accidents for a
determination of criminal intent or criminal acts. Criminal
investigations have priority.
(g) Army law enforcement agencies will maintain close liaison and
cooperation with CAIG boards. Such cooperation, particularly with
respect to interviews of victims and witnesses and in collection and
preservation of physical evidence, should support both the CAIG and law
enforcement collateral investigations.
Sec. 634.32 Parking.
(a) The most efficient use of existing on- and off-street parking
space should be stressed on a non-reserved (first-come, first-served)
basis.
(b) Reserved parking facilities should be designated as parking by
permit or numerically by category of eligible parkers. Designation of
parking spaces by name, grade, rank, or title should be avoided.
(c) Illegal parking contributes to congestion and slows traffic
flow on an installation. Strong enforcement of parking restrictions
results in better use of available parking facilities and eliminates
conditions causing traffic accidents.
(d) The ``Denver boot'' device is authorized for use as a technique
to assist in the enforcement of parking violations where immobilization
of the POV is necessary for safety. Under no circumstances should the
device be used to punish or ``teach a lesson'' to violators. Booting
should not be used if other reasonably effective but less restrictive
means of enforcement (such as warnings, ticketing, reprimands,
revocations, or suspensions of on-post driving privileges) are
available. Procedures for booting must be developed as follows:
(1) Local standing operating procedures (SOPs) must be developed to
control the discretion of enforcers and limit booting to specific
offenses. SOPs should focus on specific reasons for booting, such as
immobilization of unsafe, uninspected, or unregistered vehicles or
compelling the presence of repeat offenders. All parking violations
must be clearly outlined in the installation traffic code.
(2) Drivers should be placed on notice that particular violations
or multiple violations may result in booting. Also, drivers must be
provided with a prompt hearing and an opportunity to obtain the release
of their property.
[[Page 79003]]
(3) To limit liability, drivers must be warned when a boot is
attached to their vehicle and instructed how to have the boot removed
without damaging the vehicle.
Sec. 634.33 Traffic violation reports.
(a) Most traffic violations occurring on DOD installations (within
the UNITED STATES or its territories) should be referred to the proper
U.S. Magistrate. (Army, see AR 190-45; DLA, see DLA One Book Process
Chapter, Criminal Offenses and U.S. Federal Court Procedures; and Air
Force, see AFI 51-905). However, violations are not referred when--
(1) The operator is driving a Government vehicle at the time of the
violation.
(2) A Federal Magistrate is either not available or lacks
jurisdiction to hear the matter because the violation occurred in an
area where the Federal Government has only proprietary legislative
jurisdiction.
(3) Mission requirements make referral of offenders impractical.
(4) A U.S. Magistrate is available but the accused refuses to
consent to the jurisdiction of the court and the U.S. Attorney refuses
to process the case before a U.S. District Court. For the Navy, DUI and
driving under the influence of drugs cases will be referred to the
Federal Magistrate.
(b) Installation commanders will establish administrative
procedures for processing traffic violations.
(1) All traffic violators on military installations will be issued
either a DD Form 1408 (Armed Forces Traffic Ticket) or a Central
Violations Bureau (CVB) United States District Court Violation Notice
(DCVN), as appropriate. Unless specified otherwise by separate Service/
DLA policy, only on-duty law enforcement personnel (including game
wardens) designated by the installation law enforcement officer may
issue these forms. Air Force individuals certified under the Parking
Traffic Warden Program may issue DD Form 1408 in areas under their
control.
(2) A copy of all reports on military personnel and DOD civilian
employees apprehended for intoxicated driving will be forwarded to the
installation alcohol and drug abuse facility.
(c) Installation commanders will establish procedures used for
disposing of traffic violation cases through administrative or judicial
action consistent with the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) and
Federal law.
(d) The CVB will be used to refer violations of State traffic laws
made applicable to the installation (Assimilative Crimes Act (18 U.S.C.
13) and the delegation memorandum in DoDD 5525.4, enclosure 1, and
other violations of Federal law) to the U.S. Magistrate. (Army users,
see AR 190-45.)
(1) A copy of DD Form 1805 and any traffic violation reports on
military personnel and DOD civilian employees will be forwarded to the
commander or supervisor of the violator. DA form 3975 may be use to
forward the report.
(2) Detailed instructions for properly completing the CVB are
contained in separate Service policy directives.
(3) The assimilation of State traffic laws as Federal offenses
should be identified by a specific State code reference in the CODE
SECTION block of the CVB (or in a complaint filed with the U.S.
Magistrate).
(4) The Statement of Probable Cause on the CVB will be used
according to local staff judge advocate and U.S. Magistrate court
policy. The Statement of Probable Cause is required by the Federal
misdemeanor rules to support the issuance of a summons or arrest
warrant.
(5) For cases referred to U.S. Magistrates, normal distribution of
the CVB will be as follows:
(i) The installation law enforcement official will forward copy 1
(white) and copy 2 (yellow) to the U.S. District Court (Central
Violation Bureau).
(ii) The installation law enforcement office will file copy 3
(pink).
(iii) Law enforcement personnel will provide copy 4 (envelope) to
the violator.
(e) When DD Form 1408 is used, one copy (including written
warnings) will be forwarded through command channels to the service
member's commander, to the commander of the military family member's
sponsor, or to the civilian's supervisor or employer as the
installation commander may establish.
(1) Previous traffic violations committed by the offender and
points assessed may be shown.
(2) For violations that require a report of action taken, the DD
Form 1408 will be returned to the office of record through the
reviewing authority as the installation commander may establish.
(3) When the report is received by the office of record, that
office will enter the action on the violator's driving record.
Sec. 634.34 Training of law enforcement personnel.
(a) As a minimum, installation law enforcement personnel will be
trained to do the following:
(1) Recognize signs of alcohol and other drug impairment in persons
operating motor vehicles.
(2) Prepare DD Form 1920 (Alcohol Influence Report).
(3) Perform the three field tests of the improved sobriety testing
techniques (Sec. 634.36[b]).
(4) Determine when a person appears intoxicated but is actually
physically or mentally ill and requires prompt medical attention.
(5) Understand the operation of breath-testing devices.
(b) Each installation using breath-testing devices will ensure that
operators of these devices--
(1) Are chosen for integrity, maturity, and sound judgment.
(2) Meet certification requirements of the State where the
installation is located.
(c) Installations located in States or overseas areas having a
formal breath-testing and certification program should ensure operators
attend that training.
(d) Installations located in States or overseas areas with no
formal training program will train personnel at courses offered by
selected civilian institutions or manufacturers of the equipment.
(e) Operators must maintain proficiency through refresher training
every 18 months or as required by the State.
Sec. 634.35 Blood alcohol concentration standards.
(a) Administrative revocation of driving privileges and other
enforcement measures will be applied uniformly to offenders driving
under the influence of alcohol or drugs. When a person is tested under
the implied consent provisions of Sec. 634.8, the results of the test
will be evaluated as follows:
(1) If the percentage is 0.05 but less than 0.08, presume the
person may be impaired. This standard may be considered with other
competent evidence in determining whether the person was under the
influence of alcohol.
(2) If the percentage is 0.08 or more, or if tests reflect the
presence of illegal drugs, the person was driving while intoxicated.
(b) Percentages in paragraph (a) of this section are percent of
weight by volume of alcohol in the blood based on grams of alcohol per
100 milliliters of blood. These presumptions will be considered with
other evidence in determining intoxication.
Sec. 634.36 Chemical testing policies and procedures.
(a) Validity of chemical testing. Results of chemical testing are
valid under this part only under the following circumstances:
(1) Blood, urine, or other bodily substances are tested using
generally
[[Page 79004]]
accepted scientific and medical methods and standards.
(2) Breath tests are administered by qualified personnel (Sec.
634.33).
(3) An evidential breath-testing device approved by the State or
host nation is used. For Army, Air Force, and Marine Corps, the device
must also be listed on the NHTSA ``Conforming Products List of
Evidential Breath Measurement Devices'' (77 FR 35747, and subsequent
updates that NHTSA may publish periodically in the Federal Register).
The most current NHTSA list may be found by searching the Federal
Register Web site (https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/search?conditions%5Bterm%5D=%22Conforming+Products+List+of+Evidential+Breath+Measurement+Devices%22).
(4) Procedures established by the State or host nation or as
prescribed in paragraph (b) of this section are followed.
(b) Breath-testing device operational procedures. If the State or
host nation has not established procedures for use of breath-testing
devices, the following procedures will apply:
(1) Screening breath-testing devices will be used--
(i) During the initial traffic stop as a field sobriety testing
technique, along with other field sobriety testing techniques, to
determine if further testing is needed on an evidential breath-testing
device.
(ii) According to manufacture operating instructions. (For Army,
Air Force, and Marine Corps, the screening breath-testing device must
also be listed on the NHTSA ``Conforming Products List of Evidential
Breath Measurement Devices'' (see paragraph (a)(3) of this section).
(2) Evidential breath-testing devices will be used as follows:
(i) Observe the person to be tested for at least 15 minutes before
collecting the breath specimen. During this time, the person must not
drink alcoholic beverages or other fluids, eat, smoke, chew tobacco/
gum, or ingest any substance.
(ii) Verify calibration and proper operation of the instrument by
using a control sample immediately before the test.
(iii) Comply with operational procedures in the manufacturer's
current instruction manual.
(iv) Perform preventive maintenance as required by the instruction
manual.
(c) Chemical tests of personnel involved in fatal accidents. (1)
Installation medical authorities will immediately notify the
installation law enforcement officer of--
(i) The death of any person involved in a motor vehicle accident.
(ii) The circumstances surrounding such an accident, based on
information available at the time of admission or receipt of the body
of the victim.
(2) Medical authorities will examine the bodies of those persons
killed in a motor vehicle accident to include drivers, passengers, and
pedestrians subject to military jurisdiction. They will also examine
the bodies of family members, who are 16 years of age or older, if the
sponsors give their consent. Tests for the presence and concentration
of alcohol or other drugs in the person's blood, bodily fluids, or
tissues will be made as soon as possible and where practical within
eight hours of death. The test results will be included in the medical
reports.
(3) As provided by law and medical conditions permitting, a blood
or breath sample will be obtained from any surviving operator whose
vehicle is involved in a fatal accident.
Sec. 634.37 Detection, apprehension, and testing of intoxicated
drivers.
(a) Law enforcement personnel usually detect drivers under the
influence of alcohol or other drugs by observing unusual or abnormal
driving behavior. Drivers showing such behavior will be stopped
immediately. The cause of the unusual driving behavior will be
determined, and proper enforcement action will be taken.
(b) When a law enforcement officer reasonably concludes that the
individual driving or in control of the vehicle is impaired, field
sobriety tests should be conducted on the individual. The DD Form 1920
may be used by law enforcement agencies in examining, interpreting, and
recording results of such tests. Law enforcement personnel should use
the Standardized Field Sobriety Test battery as sanctioned by the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (consisting of three
tests: The horizontal gaze nystagmus test, Walk and Turn, and One-Leg
Stand) and screening breath-testing devices to conduct field sobriety
tests.
Sec. 634.38 Voluntary breath and bodily fluid testing based on
implied consent.
(a) Implied consent policy is explained in Sec. 634.8.
(b) Tests may be administered only if the following conditions are
met:
(1) The person was lawfully stopped while driving, operating, or in
actual physical control of a motor vehicle on the installation.
(2) Reasonable suspicion exists to believe that the person was
driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
(3) A request was made to the person to consent to the tests
combined with a warning that failure to voluntarily submit to or
complete a chemical test of bodily fluids or breath will result in the
revocation of driving privileges.
(c) As stated in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the law
enforcement official relying on implied consent will warn the person
that driving privileges will be revoked if the person fails to
voluntarily submit to or complete a requested chemical test. The person
does not have the right to have an attorney present before stating
whether he or she will submit to a test, or during the actual test.
Installation commanders will prescribe the type or types of chemical
tests to be used. Testing will follow policies and procedures in Sec.
634.35. The results of chemical tests conducted under the implied
consent provisions of this part may be used as evidence in courts-
martial, non-judicial proceedings under Article 15 of the UCMJ,
administrative actions, and civilian courts.
(d) Special rules exist for persons who have hemophilia, other
blood-clotting disorders, or any medical or surgical disorder being
treated with an anticoagulant. These persons--
(1) May refuse a blood extraction test without penalty.
(2) Will not be administered a blood extraction test to determine
alcohol or other drug concentration or presence under this part.
(3) May be given breath or urine tests, or both.
(e) If a person suspected of intoxicated driving refuses to submit
to a chemical test, a test will not be administered except as specified
in Sec. 634.39.
Sec. 634.39 Involuntary extraction of bodily fluids in traffic cases.
(a) General. The procedures outlined in this section pertain only
to the investigation of individuals stopped, apprehended, or cited on a
military installation for any offense related to driving a motor
vehicle and for whom probable cause exists to believe that such
individual is intoxicated. Extractions of body fluids in furtherance of
other kinds of investigations are governed by the Manual for Courts-
Martial, United States, Military Rule of Evidence 315 (2002) (MRE 315),
and regulatory rules concerning requesting and granting authorizations
for searches.
(1) Air Force policy on nonconsensual extraction of blood samples
is addressed in AFI 44-102.
(2) Army and Marine Corps personnel should not undertake the
nonconsensual extraction of body fluids
[[Page 79005]]
for reasons other than a valid medical purpose without first obtaining
the advice and concurrence of the installation staff judge advocate or
his or her designee.
(3) DLA policy on nonconsensual taking of blood samples is
contained in the DLA One Book Process Chapter, Search and Seizure.
(b) Procedures. Involuntary bodily fluid extraction must be based
on valid search and seizure authorization. An individual subject to the
UCMJ who does not consent to chemical testing, as described in Sec.
634.37, may nonetheless be subjected to an involuntary extraction of
bodily fluids, including blood and urine, only in accordance with the
following procedures:
(1) An individual subject to the UCMJ who was driving a motor
vehicle and suspected of being under the influence of an intoxicant may
be subjected to a nonconsensual bodily fluid extraction to test for the
presence of intoxicants only when there is a probable cause to believe
that such an individual was driving or in control of a vehicle while
under the influence of an intoxicant.
(i) A search authorization by an appropriate commander or military
magistrate obtained pursuant to the Manual for Courts-Martial, United
States, Military Rule of Evidence 315 (2002) is required prior to such
nonconsensual extraction.
(ii) A search authorization is not required under such
circumstances when there is a clear indication that evidence of
intoxication will be found and there is reason to believe that the
delay necessary to obtain a search authorization would result in the
loss or destruction of the evidence sought.
(iii) Because warrantless searches are subject to close scrutiny by
the courts, obtaining an authorization is highly preferable.
Warrantless searches generally should be conducted only after
coordination with the servicing staff judge advocate or legal officer,
and attempts to obtain authorization from an appropriate official prove
unsuccessful due to the unavailability of a commander or military
magistrate.
(2) If authorization from the military magistrate or commander
proves unsuccessful due to the unavailability of such officials, the
commander of a medical facility is empowered by the Manual for Courts-
Martial, United States, Military Rule of Evidence 315 (2002), to
authorize such extraction from an individual located in the facility at
the time the authorization is sought.
(i) Before authorizing the involuntary extraction, the commander of
the medical facility should, if circumstances permit, coordinate with
the servicing staff judge advocate or legal officer.
(ii) The medical facility commander authorizing the extraction
under the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, Military Rule of
Evidence 315 (2002) need not be on duty as the attending physician at
the facility where the extraction is to be performed and the actual
extraction may be accomplished by other qualified medical personnel.
(iii) The authorizing official may consider his or her own
observations of the individual in determining probable cause.
(c) Role of medical personnel. Authorization for the nonconsensual
extraction of blood samples for evidentiary purposes by qualified
medical personnel is independent of, and not limited by, provisions
defining medical care, such as the provision for nonconsensual medical
care pursuant to AR 600-20, section IV. Extraction of blood will be
accomplished by qualified medical personnel. (See the Manual for
Courts-Martial, United States, Military Rule of Evidence 312[g]
[2002]).
(1) In performing this duty, medical personnel are expected to use
only that amount of force that is reasonable and necessary to
administer the extraction.
(2) Any force necessary to overcome an individual's resistance to
the extraction normally will be provided by law enforcement personnel
or by personnel acting under orders from the member's unit commander.
(3) Life endangering force will not be used in an attempt to effect
nonconsensual extractions.
(4) All law enforcement and medical personnel will keep in mind the
possibility that the individual may require medical attention for
possible disease or injury.
(d) Nonconsensual extractions of blood will be done in a manner
that will not interfere with or delay proper medical attention. Medical
personnel will determine the priority to be given involuntary blood
extractions when other medical treatment is required.
(e) Use of Army medical treatment facilities and personnel for
blood alcohol testing has no relevance to whether or not the suspect is
eligible for military medical treatment. The medical effort in such
instances is in support of a valid military mission (law enforcement),
not related to providing medical treatment to an individual.
Sec. 634.40 Testing at the request of the apprehended person.
(a) A person subject to tests under Sec. 634.8 may request that an
additional test be done privately. The person may choose a doctor,
qualified technician, chemist, registered nurse, or other qualified
person to do the test. The person must pay the cost of the test. The
test must be a chemical test approved by the State or host nation in an
overseas command.
(b) If the tests are requested, the apprehended person is
responsible for making all arrangements.
(c) All tests will be completed without unnecessary delay, within
two hours of detention if possible.
(d) If the suspect fails to or is unable to obtain any additional
tests, the results of the tests that were done at the direction of a
law enforcement official remain valid and may still be used to support
actions under separate Service regulations, UCMJ, and the U.S.
Magistrate Court.
Sec. 634.41 General off installation traffic activities.
In areas not under military control, civil authorities enforce
traffic laws. Law enforcement authorities will establish a system to
exchange information with civil authorities. Army and Air Force
installation law enforcement authorities will establish a system to
exchange information with civil authorities to enhance the chain of
command's visibility of a soldier's and airman's off post traffic
violations. These agreements will provide for the assessment of traffic
points based on reports from state licensing authorities involving Army
military personnel. The provisions of Subpart E of this part and the
VRS automated system provide for the collection of off post traffic
incident reports and data. As provided in AR 190-45, civilian law
enforcement agencies are considered routine users of Army law
enforcement data and will be granted access to data when available from
Army law enforcement systems of records. Off-installation traffic
activities in overseas areas are governed by formal agreements with the
host nation government. Procedures should be established to process
reports received from civil authorities on serious traffic violations,
accidents, and intoxicated driving incidents involving persons subject
to this part. The exchange of information is limited to Army and Air
Force military personnel. Provost marshals will not collect and use
data concerning civilian employees, family members, and contract
personnel except as allowed by state and Federal laws.
Sec. 634.42 Compliance with State laws.
(a) Installation commanders will inform service members,
contractors and DOD civilian employees to comply with State and local
traffic laws when operating government motor vehicles.
[[Page 79006]]
(b) Commanders will coordinate with the proper civil law
enforcement agency before moving Government vehicles that exceed legal
limits or regulations or that may subject highway users to unusual
hazards. (See AR 55-162/OPNAVINST 4600.11D/AFJI 24-216/MCO 4643.5C).
(c) Installation commanders will maintain liaison with civil
enforcement agencies and encourage the following:
(1) Release of a Government vehicle operator to military
authorities unless one of the following conditions exists.
(i) The offense warrants detention.
(ii) The person's condition is such that further operation of a
motor vehicle could result in injury to the person or others.
(2) Prompt notice to military authorities when military personnel
or drivers of Government motor vehicles have--
(i) Committed serious violations of civil traffic laws.
(ii) Been involved in traffic accidents.
(3) Prompt notice of actions by a State or host nation to suspend,
revoke, or restrict the State or host nation driver's license (vehicle
operation privilege) of persons who--
(i) Operate Government motor vehicles.
(ii) Regularly operate a POV on the installation. (See also Sec.
634.16).
Sec. 634.43 Civil-military cooperative programs.
(a) State-Armed Forces Traffic Workshop Program. This program is an
organized effort to coordinate military and civil traffic safety
activities throughout a State or area. Installation commanders will
cooperate with State and local officials in this program and provide
proper support and participation.
(b) Community-Installation Traffic Workshop Program. Installation
commanders should establish a local workshop program to coordinate the
installation traffic efforts with those of local communities. Sound and
practical traffic planning depends on a balanced program of traffic
enforcement, engineering, and education. Civilian and military legal
and law enforcement officers, traffic engineers, safety officials, and
public affairs officers should take part.
Subpart E--Driving Records and the Traffic Point System
Sec. 634.44 Driving records.
Army installations will use DA Form 3626 (Vehicle Registration/
Driver Record) to record vehicle traffic accidents, moving violations,
suspension or revocation actions, and traffic point assessments
involving military and DOD civilian personnel, their family members,
and other personnel operating motor vehicles on a military
installation. Other Services and DLA will use their service equivalent
form for this purpose. Table 1 to part 634 prescribes mandatory minimum
or maximum suspension or revocation periods. Traffic points are not
assessed for suspension or revocation actions.
Table 1 to Part 634--Suspension/Revocation of Driving Privileges (See
Notes 1 and 2).
Assessment 1: Two-year revocation is mandatory on determination of
facts by installation commander. (For Army, a five-year revocation is
mandatory.)
Violation: Driving while driver's license or installation driving
privileges are under suspension or revocation.
Assessment 2: One-year revocation is mandatory on determination of
facts by installation commander.
Violation: Refusal to submit to or failure to complete chemical
tests (implied consent).
Assessment 3: One-year revocation is mandatory on conviction.
Violation:
A. Manslaughter (or negligent homicide by vehicle) resulting from
the operation of a motor vehicle.
B. Driving or being in actual physical control of a motor vehicle
while under the influence of intoxicating liquor (0.08% or greater on
DOD installations; violation of civil law off post).
C. Driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of any
narcotic, or while under the influence of any other drug (including
alcohol) to the degree rendered incapable of safe vehicle operation.
D. Use of a motor vehicle in the commission of a felony. Fleeing
the scene of an accident involving death or personal injury, i.e.: hit
and run.
E. Perjury or making a false statement or affidavit under oath to
responsible officials relating to the ownership or operation of motor
vehicles.
F. Unauthorized use of a motor vehicle belonging to another, when
the act does not amount to a felony.
Assessment 4: Suspension for a period of six months or less or
revocation for a period not to exceed one year is discretionary.
Violation: A. Mental or physical impairment (not including alcohol
or other drug use) to the degree rendered incompetent to drive.
B. Commission of an offense in another State which, if committed on
the installation, would be grounds for suspension or revocation.
C. Permitting an unlawful or fraudulent use of an official driver's
license.
D. Conviction of fleeing, or attempting to elude, a police officer.
E. Conviction of racing on the highway.
Assessment 5: Loss of OF 46 for minimum of six months is
discretionary.
Violation: Receiving a second one-year suspension or revocation of
driving privileges within five years.
Notes
1. When imposing a suspension or revocation because of an off-
installation offense, the effective date should be the same as the date
of civil conviction, or the date that State or host-nation driving
privileges are suspended or revoked. This effective date can be
retroactive.
2. No points are assessed for revocation or suspension actions.
Except for implied consent violations, revocations must be based on a
conviction by a civilian court or courts-martial, non-judicial
punishment under Article 15, UCMJ, or a separate hearing as addressed
in this part. If revocation for implied consent is combined with
another revocation, such as one year for intoxicated driving,
revocations may run consecutively (total of 24 months) or concurrently
(total of 12 months). The installation commander's policy should be
applied systematically and not on a case-by-case basis.
Sec. 634.45 The traffic point system.
The traffic point system provides a uniform administrative device
to impartially judge driving performance of Service and DLA personnel.
This system is not a disciplinary measure or a substitute for punitive
action. Further, this system is not intended to interfere in any way
with the reasonable exercise of an installation commander's prerogative
to issue, suspend, revoke, deny, or reinstate installation driving
privileges.
Sec. 634.46 Point system application.
(a) The Services and DLA are required to use the point system and
procedures prescribed in this section without change.
(b) The point system in of this part applies to all operators of
U.S. Government motor vehicles, on or off Federal property. The system
also applies to violators reported to installation officials in
accordance with Sec. 634.46.
(c) Points will be assessed when the person is found to have
committed a violation and the finding is by either the unit commander,
civilian supervisor, a
[[Page 79007]]
military or civilian court (including a U.S. Magistrate), or by payment
of fine, forfeiture of pay or allowances, or posted bond, or
collateral.
Table 2 to Part 634--Point Assessment for Moving Traffic Violations
(See Note 1).
A. Violation: Reckless driving (willful and wanton disregard for
the safety of persons or property).
Points assessed: 6
B. Violation: Owner knowingly and willfully permitting a physically
impaired person to operate the owner's motor vehicle.
Points assessed: 6
C. Violation: Fleeing the scene (hit and run)-property damage only.
Points assessed: 6
D. Violation: Driving vehicle while impaired (blood-alcohol content
more than 0.05 percent and less than 0.08 percent).
Points assessed: 6
E. Violation: Speed contests.
Points assessed: 6
F. Violation: Speed too fast for conditions.
Points assessed: 2
G. Violation: Speed too slow for traffic conditions, and/or
impeding the flow of traffic, causing potential safety hazard.
Points assessed: 2
H. Violation: Failure of operator or occupants to use available
restraint system devices while moving (operator assessed points).
Points assessed: 2
I. Violation: Failure to properly restrain children in a child
restraint system while moving (when child is 4 years of age or younger
or the weight of child does not exceed 45 pounds).
Points assessed: 2
J. Violation: One to 10 miles per hour over posted speed limit.
Points assessed: 3
K. Violation: Over 10 but not more than 15 miles per hour above
posted speed limit.
Points assessed: 4
L. Violation: Over 15 but not more than 20 miles per hour above
posted speed limit.
Points assessed: 5
M. Violation: Over 20 miles per hour above posted speed limit.
Points assessed: 6
N. Violation: Following too close.
Points assessed: 4
O. Violation: Failure to yield right of way to emergency vehicle.
Points assessed: 4
P. Violation: Failure to stop for school bus or school-crossing
signals.
Points assessed: 4
Q. Violation: Failure to obey traffic signals or traffic
instructions of an enforcement officer or traffic warden; or any
official regulatory traffic sign or device requiring a full stop or
yield of right of way; denying entry; or requiring direction of
traffic.
Points assessed: 4
R. Violation: Improper passing.
Points assessed: 4
S. Violation: Failure to yield (no official sign involved).
Points assessed: 4
T. Violation: Improper turning movements (no official sign
involved).
Points assessed: 3
U. Violation: Wearing of headphones/earphones while driving motor
vehicles (two or more wheels).
Points assessed: 3
V. Violation: Failure to wear an approved helmet and/or required
protective equipment while operating or riding on a motorcycle, MOPED,
or a three or four-wheel vehicle powered by a motorcycle-like engine.
Points assessed: 3
W. Violation: Improper overtaking.
Points assessed: 3
X. Violation: Other moving violations (involving driver behavior
only).
Points assessed: 3
Y. Violation: Operating an unsafe vehicle. (See Note 2).
Points assessed: 2
Z. Violation: Driver involved in accident is deemed responsible
(only added to points assessed for specific offenses).
Points assessed: 1
Notes:
1. When two or more violations are committed on a single occasion,
points may be assessed for each individual violation.
2. This measure should be used for other than minor vehicle safety
defects or when a driver or registrant fails to correct a minor defect
(for example, a burned out headlight not replaced within the grace
period on a warning ticket).
Sec. 634.47 Point system procedures.
(a) Reports of moving traffic violations recorded on DD Form 1408
or the CVB will serve as a basis for determining point assessment. For
DD Form 1408, return endorsements will be required from commanders or
supervisors.
(b) On receipt of DD Form 1408 or other military law enforcement
report of a moving violation, the unit commander, designated
supervisor, or person otherwise designated by the installation
commander will conduct an inquiry. The commander will take or recommend
proper disciplinary or administrative action. If a case involves
judicial or non-judicial actions, the final report of action taken will
not be forwarded until final adjudication.
(c) On receipt of the report of action taken (including action by a
U.S. Magistrate Court on the CVB), the installation law enforcement
officer will assess the number of points appropriate for the offense,
and record the traffic points or the suspension or revocation of
driving privileges on the person's driving record. Except as specified
otherwise in this part and other Service/DLA regulations, points will
not be assessed or driving privileges suspended or revoked when the
report of action taken indicates that neither disciplinary nor
administrative action was taken.
(d) Installation commanders may require the following driver
improvement measures as appropriate:
(1) Advisory letter through the unit commander or supervisor to any
person who has acquired six traffic points within a six-month period.
(2) Counseling or driver improvement interview, by the unit
commander, of any person who has acquired more than six but less than
12 traffic points within a six-month period. This counseling or
interview should produce recommendations to improve driver performance.
(3) Referral for medical evaluation when a driver, based on
reasonable belief, appears to have mental or physical limits that have
had or may have an adverse affect on driving performance.
(4) Attendance at remedial driver training to improve driving
performance.
(5) Referral to an alcohol or drug treatment or rehabilitation
facility for evaluation, counseling, or treatment. This action is
required for active military personnel in all cases in which alcohol or
other drugs are a contributing factor to a traffic citation, incident,
or accident.
(e) An individual's driving privileges may be suspended or revoked
as provided by this part regardless of whether these improvement
measures are accomplished.
(f) Persons whose driving privileges are suspended or revoked (for
one violation or an accumulation of 12 traffic points within 12
consecutive months, or 18 traffic points within 24 consecutive months)
will be notified in writing through official channels (Sec. 634.11).
Except for the mandatory minimum or maximum suspension or revocation
periods prescribed above, the installation commander will establish
periods of suspension or revocation. Any revocation based on traffic
points must be no less than six months. A
[[Page 79008]]
longer period may be imposed on the basis of a person's overall driving
record considering the frequency, flagrancy, severity of moving
violations, and the response to previous driver improvement measures.
In all cases, military members must successfully complete a prescribed
course in remedial driver training before driving privileges are
reinstated.
(g) Points assessed against a person will remain in effect for
point accumulation purposes for 24 consecutive months. The review of
driver records to delete traffic points should be done routinely during
records update while recording new offenses and forwarding records to
new duty stations. Completion of a revocation based on points requires
removal from the driver record of all points assessed before the
revocation.
(h) Removal of points does not authorize removal of driving record
entries for moving violations, chargeable accidents, suspensions, or
revocations. Record entries will remain posted on individual driving
records for the following periods of time.
(1) Chargeable nonfatal traffic accidents or moving violations-3
years.
(2) Non-mandatory suspensions or revocations-5 years.
(3) Mandatory revocations-7 years.
Sec. 634.48 Disposition of driving records.
Procedures will be established to ensure prompt notice to the
installation law enforcement office when a person assigned to or
employed on the installation is being transferred to another
installation, being released from military service, or ending
employment.
(a) If persons being transferred to a new installation have valid
points or other entries on the driving records, the law enforcement
offices will forward the records to the law enforcement office of the
gaining installation. Gaining installation law enforcement offices must
coordinate with applicable commanders and continue any existing
suspension or revocation based on intoxicated driving or accumulation
of traffic points. Traffic points for persons being transferred will
continue to accumulate as specified in Sec. 634.46(g).
(b) Driving records of military personnel being discharged or
released from active duty will be retained on file for two years and
then destroyed. In cases of immediate reenlistment, change of officer
component or military or civilian retirement when vehicle registration
is continued, the record will remain active.
(c) Driving records of civilian personnel terminating employment
will be retained on file for two years and then destroyed.
(d) Driving records of military family members containing point
assessments or other entries will be forwarded to the sponsor's gaining
installation in the same manner as for service members. At the new
installation, records will be analyzed and made available temporarily
to the sponsor's unit commander or supervisor for review.
(e) Driving records of retirees electing to retain installation
driving privileges will be retained. Points accumulated or entries on
the driver record regarding suspensions, revocations, moving
violations, or chargeable accidents will not be deleted from driver
records except per Sec. 634.46(g) and (h).
(f) Army users will comply with paragraphs (a) and (d) of this
section by mailing the individual's DA Form 3626 to the gaining
installation Provost Marshal/Director of Emergency Services.
Subpart F--Impounding Privately Owned Vehicles
Sec. 634.49 General.
This Subpart provides the standards and procedures for law
enforcement personnel when towing, inventorying, searching, impounding,
and disposing of POVs. This policy is based on:
(a) The interests of the Services and DLA in crime prevention,
traffic safety, and the orderly flow of vehicle traffic movement.
(b) The vehicle owner's constitutional rights to due process,
freedom from unreasonable search and seizure, and freedom from
deprivation of private property.
Sec. 634.50 Standards for impoundment.
(a) POVs should not be impounded unless the vehicles clearly
interfere with ongoing operations or movement of traffic, threaten
public safety or convenience, are involved in criminal activity,
contain evidence of criminal activity, or are stolen or abandoned.
(b) The impoundment of a POV would be inappropriate when reasonable
alternatives to impoundment exist.
(1) Attempts should be made to locate the owner of the POV and have
the vehicle removed.
(2) The vehicle may be moved a short distance to a legal parking
area and temporarily secured until the owner is found.
(3) Another responsible person may be allowed to drive or tow the
POV with permission from the owner, operator, or person empowered to
control the vehicle. In this case, the owner, operator, or person
empowered to control the vehicle will be informed that law enforcement
personnel are not responsible for safeguarding the POV.
(c) Impounding of POVs is justified when any of the following
conditions exist:
(1) The POV is illegally parked--
(i) On a street or bridge, in a tunnel, or is double parked, and
interferes with the orderly flow of traffic.
(ii) On a sidewalk, within an intersection, on a cross-walk, on a
railroad track, in a fire lane, or is blocking a driveway, so that the
vehicle interferes with operations or creates a safety hazard to other
roadway users or the general public. An example would be a vehicle
parked within 15 feet of a fire hydrant or blocking a properly marked
driveway of a fire station or aircraft-alert crew facility.
(iii) When blocking an emergency exit door of any public place
(installation theater, club, dining hall, hospital, and other
facility).
(iv) In a ``tow-away'' zone that is so marked with proper signs.
(2) The POV interferes with--
(i) Street cleaning or snow removal operations and attempts to
contact the owner have been unsuccessful.
(ii) Emergency operations during a natural disaster or fire or must
be removed from the disaster area during cleanup operations.
(3) The POV has been used in a crime or contains evidence of
criminal activity.
(4) The owner or person in charge has been apprehended and is
unable or unwilling to arrange for custody or removal.
(5) The POV is mechanically defective and is a menace to others
using the public roadways.
(6) The POV is disabled by a traffic incident and the operator is
either unavailable or physically incapable of having the vehicle towed
to a place of safety for storage or safekeeping.
(7) Law enforcement personnel reasonably believe the vehicle is
abandoned.
Sec. 634.51 Towing and storage.
(a) Impounded POVs may be towed and stored by either the Services
and DLA or a contracted wrecker service depending on availability of
towing services and the local commander's preference.
(b) The installation commander will designate an enclosed area on
the installation that can be secured by lock and key for an impound lot
to be used by the military or civilian wrecker service. An approved
impoundment area belonging to the contracted wrecker service may also
be used provided the
[[Page 79009]]
area assures adequate accountability and security of towed vehicles.
One set of keys to the enclosed area will be maintained by the
installation law enforcement officer or designated individual.
(c) Temporary impoundment and towing of POVs for violations of the
installation traffic code or involvement in criminal activities will be
accomplished under the direct supervision of law enforcement personnel.
Sec. 634.52 Procedures for impoundment.
(a) Unattended POVs. (1) DD Form 2504 (Abandoned Vehicle Notice)
will be conspicuously placed on POVs considered unattended. This action
will be documented by an entry in the installation law enforcement desk
journal or blotter.
(2) The owner will be allowed three days from the date the POV is
tagged to remove the vehicle before impoundment action is initiated. If
the vehicle has not been removed after three days, it will be removed
by the installation towing service or the contracted wrecker service.
If a contracted wrecker service is used, a DD Form 2505 (Abandoned
Vehicle Removal Authorization) will be completed and issued to the
contractor by the installation law enforcement office.
(3) After the vehicle has been removed, the installation law
enforcement officer or the contractor will complete DD Form 2506
(Vehicle Impoundment Report) as a record of the actions taken.
(i) An inventory listing personal property will be done to protect
the owner, law enforcement personnel, the contractor, and the
commander.
(ii) The contents of a closed container such as a suitcase inside
the vehicle need not be inventoried. Such articles should be opened
only if necessary to identify the owner of the vehicle or if the
container might contain explosives or otherwise present a danger to the
public. Merely listing the container and sealing it with security tape
will suffice.
(iii) Personal property must be placed in a secure area for
safekeeping.
(4) DD Form 2507 (Notice of Vehicle Impoundment) will be forwarded
by certified mail to the address of the last known owner of the vehicle
to advise the owner of the impoundment action, and request information
concerning the owner's intentions pertaining to the disposition of the
vehicle.
(b) Stolen POVs or vehicles involved in criminal activity. (1) When
the POV is to be held for evidentiary purposes, the vehicle should
remain in the custody of the applicable Service or DLA until law
enforcement purposes are served.
(2) Recovered stolen POVs will be released to the registered owner,
unless held for evidentiary purposes, or to the law enforcement agency
reporting the vehicle stolen, as appropriate.
(3) A POV held on request of other authorities will be retained in
the custody of the applicable Service or DLA until the vehicle can be
released to such authorities.
Sec. 634.53 Search incident to impoundment based on criminal
activity.
Search of a POV in conjunction with impoundment based on criminal
activity will likely occur in one of the following general situations:
(a) The owner or operator is not present. This situation could
arise during traffic and crime-related impoundments and abandoned
vehicle seizures. A property search related to an investigation of
criminal activity should not be conducted without search authority
unless the item to be seized is in plain view or is readily discernible
on the outside as evidence of criminal activity. When in doubt, proper
search authority should be obtained before searching.
(b) The owner or operator is present. This situation can occur
during either a traffic or criminal incident, or if the operator is
apprehended for a crime or serious traffic violation and sufficient
probable cause exists to seize the vehicle. This situation could also
arise during cases of intoxicated driving or traffic accidents in which
the operator is present but incapacitated or otherwise unable to make
adequate arrangements to safeguard the vehicle. If danger exists to the
police or public or if there is risk of loss or destruction of
evidence, an investigative type search of the vehicle may be conducted
without search authority. (Air Force, see AFP 125-2).
Sec. 634.54 Disposition of vehicles after impoundment.
(a) If a POV is impounded for evidentiary purposes, the vehicle can
be held for as long as the evidentiary or law enforcement purpose
exists. The vehicle must then be returned to the owner without delay
unless directed otherwise by competent authority.
(b) If the vehicle is unclaimed after 120 days from the date
notification was mailed to the last known owner or the owner released
the vehicle by properly completing DD Form 2505, the vehicle will be
disposed of by one of the following procedures:
(1) Release to the lien holder, if known.
(2) Processed as abandoned property in accordance with DOD 4160.21-
M.
(i) Property may not be disposed of until diligent effort has been
made to find the owner; or the heirs, next of kin, or legal
representative of the owner.
(ii) The diligent effort to find one of those mentioned in
paragraph (a) of this section shall begin no later than seven days
after the date on which the property comes into custody or control of
the law enforcement agency.
(iii) The period for which this effort is continued may not exceed
45 days.
(iv) If the owner or those mentioned in Sec. 634.53 are
determined, but not found, the property may not be disposed of until
the expiration of 45 days after the date when notice, giving the time
and place of the intended sale or other disposition, has been sent by
certified or registered mail to that person at their last known
address.
(v) When diligent effort to determine those mentioned in paragraph
(b)(2)(iv) of this section is unsuccessful, the property may be
disposed of without delay, except that if it has a fair market value of
more than $500, the law enforcement official may not dispose of the
property until 45 days after the date it is received at the storage
point.
(c) All contracts for the disposal of abandoned vehicles must
comply with 10 U.S.C. 2575.
Subpart G--List of State Driver's License Agencies
Sec. 634.55 List of State driver's license agencies.
Notification of State Driver's License Agencies. The installation
commander will notify the State driver's license agency of those
personnel whose installation driving privileges are revoked for one
year or more, following final adjudication of the intoxicated driving
offense or for refusing to submit to a lawful blood-alcohol content
test in accordance with Sec. 634.8. This notification will include the
basis for the suspension and the blood alcohol level. The notification
will be sent to the State in which the driver's license was issued. A
current listing of State driver's license agencies can be located on
the worldwide web at https://www.usa.gov/Topics/Motor-Vehicles.shtml.
State driver's license agencies are listed as follows:
Alabama: Motor Vehicle Division, 2721Gunter Park Drive, Montgomery,
AL36101, (205) 271-3250.
Alaska: Motor Vehicle Division, P.O. Box 100960, Anchorage, AK 99510,
(907) 269-5572.
Arizona: Motor Vehicle Division, 1801 West Jefferson Street Phoenix, AZ
85007, (602) 255-7295.
[[Page 79010]]
Arkansas: Motor Vehicle Division, Joel & Ledbetter Bldg., 7th and Wolfe
Streets, Little Rock, AR 72203, (501) 371-1886.
California: Department of Motor Vehicles, P.O. Box 932340, Sacramento,
CA 94232, (916) 445-0898.
Colorado: Motor Vehicle Division, 140 West Sixth Avenue, Denver, CO
80204, (303) 866-3158.
Connecticut: Department of Motor Vehicles, 60 State Street
Wethersfield, CT 06109, (203) 566-5904.
Delaware: Motor Vehicle Director, State Highway Administration Bldg.,
P.O. Box 698, Dover, DE 19903, (302) 736-4421.
District of Columbia: Department of Transportation, Bureau of Motor
Vehicles, 301 C Street NW., Washington, DC 20001, (202) 727-5409.
Florida: Division of Motor Vehicles, Neil Kirkman Building,
Tallahassee, FL 32301, (904) 488-6921.
Georgia: Motor Vehicle Division, Trinity-Washington Bldg., Room 114,
Atlanta, GA 30334, (404) 656-4149.
Hawaii: Division of Motor Vehicle and Licensing, 1455 S. Benetania
Street, Honolulu, HI 96814, (808) 943-3221.
Idaho: Transportation Department, 3311 State Street, P.O. Box 34,
Boise, ID 83731, (208) 334-3650.
Illinois: Secretary of State, Centennial Building, Springfield, IL
62756, (217) 782-4815.
Indiana: Bureau of Motor Vehicles, State Office Building, Room 901,
Indianapolis, IN 46204, (317) 232-2701.
Iowa: Department of Transportation Office of Operating Authority, Lucas
Office Bldg., Des Moines, IA 50319, (515) 281-5664.
Kansas: Department of Revenue, Division of Vehicles, Interstate
Registration Bureau, State Office Bldg., Topeka, KS 66612, (913) 296-
3681.
Kentucky: Department of Transportation, New State Office Building,
Frankfort, KY 40622, (502) 564-4540.
Louisiana: Motor Vehicle Administrator, S. Foster Drive, Baton Rouge,
LA 70800, (504) 925-6304.
Maine: Department of State, Motor Vehicle Division, Augusta, ME 04333,
(207) 289-5440.
Maryland: Motor Vehicle Administration, 6601 Ritchie Highway NE., Glen
Burnie, MD 21062, (301) 768-7000.
Massachusetts: Registry of Motor Vehicle, 100 Nashua Street, Boston, MA
02114, (617) 727-3780.
Michigan: Department of State, Division of Driver Licenses and Vehicle
Records, Lansing, MI 48918, (517) 322-1486.
Minnesota: Department of Public Safety, 108 Transportation Building,
St. Paul, MN 55155, (612) 296-2138.
Mississippi: Office of State Tax Commission, Woolfolk Building,
Jackson, MS 39205, (601) 982-1248.
Missouri: Department of Revenue, Motor Vehicles Bureau, Harry S. Truman
Bldg., 301 W. High Street, Jefferson City, MO 65105, (314) 751-3234.
Montana: Highway Commission, Box 4639, Helena, MT 59604, (406) 449-
2476.
Nebraska: Department of Motor Vehicles, P.O. Box 94789, Lincoln, NE
68509, (402) 471-3891.
Nevada: Department of Motor Vehicles, Carson City, NV 89711, (702) 885-
5370.
New Hampshire: Department of Safety, Division of Motor Vehicles, James
H. Haynes Bldg., Concord, NH 03305, (603) 271-2764.
New Jersey: Motor Vehicle Division, 25 S. Montgomery Street, Trenton,
NJ 08666, (609) 292-2368.
New Mexico: Motor Transportation Division, Joseph M. Montoya Building,
Santa Fe, NM 87503, (505) 827-0392.
New York: Division of Motor Vehicles, Empire State Plaza, Albany, NY
12228, (518) 474-2121.
North Carolina: Division of Motor Vehicles, Motor Vehicles Bldg.,
Raleigh, NC 27697, (919) 733-2403.
North Dakota: Motor Vehicle Department, Capitol Grounds, Bismarck, ND
58505, (701) 224-2619.
Ohio: Bureau of Motor Vehicles, P.O. Box 16520, Columbus, OH 43216,
(614) 466-4095.
Oklahoma: Oklahoma Tax Commission, Motor Vehicle Division, 2501 Lincoln
Boulevard, Oklahoma City, OK 73194, (405) 521-3036
Oregon: Motor Vehicles Division, 1905 Lana Avenue NE., Salem, OR 97314,
(503) 378-6903.
Pennsylvania: Department of Transportation, Bureau of Motor Vehicles,
Transportation and Safety Bldg., Harrisburg, PA 17122, (717) 787-3130.
Rhode Island: Department of Motor Vehicles, State Office Building,
Providence, RI 02903, (401) 277-6900.
South Carolina: Motor Vehicle Division, P.O. Drawer 1498, Columbia, SC
29216, (803) 758-5821.
South Dakota: Division of Motor Vehicles, 118 W. Capitol, Pierre, SD
57501, (605) 773-3501.
Tennessee: Department of Revenue, Motor Vehicle Division, 500 Deaderick
Street, Nashville, TN 37242, (615) 741-1786.
Texas: Department of Highways and Public Transportation, Motor Vehicle
Division, 40th and Jackson Avenue, Austin, TX 78779, (512) 475-7686.
Utah: Motor Vehicle Division State Fairgrounds, 1095 Motor Avenue, Salt
Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 533-5311.
Vermont: Department of Motor Vehicles, State Street, Montpelier, VT
05603, (802) 828-2014.
Virginia: Department of Motor Vehicles, 2300 W. Broad Street, Richmond,
VA 23220, (804) 257-1855.
Washington: Department of Licensing, Highways--Licenses Building,
Olympia, WA 98504, (206) 753-6975.
West Virginia: Department of Motor Vehicles, 1800 Washington Street,
East Charleston, WV 25317, (304) 348-2719.
Wisconsin: Department of Transportation Reciprocity and Permits, P.O.
Box 7908, Madison, WI 53707, (608) 266-2585.
Wyoming: Department of Revenue, Policy Division, 122 W. 25th Street,
Cheyenne, WY 82002, (307) 777-5273.
Guam: Deputy Director, Revenue and Taxation, Government of Guam, Agana,
Guam 96910, (671) 635-7651
Puerto Rico: Department of Transportation and Public Works, Bureau of
Motor Vehicles, P.O. Box 41243, Minillas Station, Santurce, Puerto Rico
00940, (809) 722-2823.
[FR Doc. 2015-31762 Filed 12-17-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3710-08-P