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New Brunswick

'A vehicle's a weapon': Woman convicted of impaired driving shares experience

A Fredericton woman who killed her friend while driving under the influence is using the holidays to spread a message about the dangers of drinking and driving.

Fredericton woman uses the holidays to share her story about the dangers of drinking and driving

Julie Dorcas tells personal story about driving drunk and costing a friend his life

8 years ago
Duration 2:35
A Fredericton woman is using the holidays to spread a message about the dangers of drinking and driving.

A Fredericton woman who killed her friend while driving under the influence is using the holidays to spread a message about the dangers of drinking and driving.

JulieDorcaswas driving home from a party in March 2007 when she came upon a sharp turn, lost control of her vehicle and drove off the shoulder of the road, killing her 19-year-old friend, Troy Price.

There were six people inside the then-26-year-old's vehicle.

"If you're one of those people that drink and drive and think that you're fine because you've been doing it for so long, then you need to wake up," an emotional Dorcas told CBC News.

"There's a lot of hurt going on right now. People need to stop doing it."

Dorcas pleaded guilty in Fredericton provincial court to a charge of impaired driving causing death. She served a 32-month sentence at Nova Institution for Women, a federal prison inTruro, N.S.

Prior to the crash,Dorcassaid her biggest fear was getting caught while drinking and driving and having her name in the paper.

Today her biggest fear is more people will get behind the wheel while under the influence.

"The worst punishment I have is for myself," said the mother of two boys.

10 years later

It's been almost a decade since her friend's death andDorcassaid it's harder today.

Although she's made peace with Price's father, Dorcascontinues to struggle withthe emotional aftermath of the crash. She said she suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and wakes up every morning thinkingabout Price.

"I'm stuck reliving it all the time," she said.

Dorcas, who works at a gas station on Fredericton's north side, said she hears countless stories from customersretelling stories of Mike Burden, the motorcyclist that lost his leg due to an impaired driver, and Jennifer Dawn Brewer, the 24-year-old killed in an impaired driving accident and whose body was later found in the St. John River.

These incidents serve as a sharp reminder as theanniversary of Price's death nears, Dorcassaid.

"It's always there in the back of my mind," she said. "I just feel bad for their families."

'A vehicle's a weapon'

Dorcassaid she thinks drinking and driving is a huge issue across New Brunswick something that has become normal among residents, especially for repeat offenders. She said she constantly hears storiesof people in her hometown of Stanley, N.B., that are drinking and driving, as well as those in other rural communities.

"Why are these people getting a licence back?" If I was walking down King Street with a gun with one bullet in it like Russian roulette and it didn't kill anybody, would I be allowed to have a gun again? No," she said.

"A vehicle's a weapon."

Dorcas said she hopes sharing her story will at least preventone person from getting behind the wheel while drunk.

"People don't think it'll happen to them."