Young Amish men and women are drinking, then getting into buggies to drive home. Sometimes, the teens pass out leaving their horses to find the way home. So, unless the horse is drunk I guess it isn't drunk driving?
Amish youth - those between the age of 16 and their early 20s - are not yet members of the church. That "loophole" frees them to pursue worldly activities that normally would be off-limits. Thus setting the stage for some of the most incredible binge drinking ever!
Hear riveting police reports like: "Buggy all over the road ... headed toward [State Rt.] 168 1 mph."
Deputy Dhayer remembers an incident last year when a drunken Amish man resisted arrest, fighting officers on a sheet of ice. "After that fight, we lost tolerance," says Deputy Dhayer. "Now if they’re drunk, they go to jail." And all we get on FOX are cars crashing into each other? Where are the drunken Amish/Police fights on ice? Hello? FOX producers? Your market is calling!
And alcohol isn’t the only fling some Amish youth have with the modern world. Some smoke, cut their hair, and wear English clothes. Some experiment with drugs. They attend sporting events, concerts, and movies, and visit amusement parks. And young men deck out their buggies with elaborate stereo systems, cranking up the volume as they "cruise" the countryside on Sunday afternoons. Poor horses, having to haul around batteries and speakers and stacks of crappy pop music. Where is PeTA in all this? Won't somebody save the poor horses?
The buggy’s interior is upholstered in royal blue velour. A triangular swatch of the same material is attached to the dash. Silver key chains with colorful emblems - Guns and Roses, Cleveland Browns, and a miniature baseball bat - hang from battery-operated light switches.
Five stereo speakers - including a 12-inch sub-woofer - line the inside of the covered buggy.
On the seat is a selection of old cassette tapes: "The Outfield," "Vixen," and "Hooters."
"This thing will rock, I’m telling you," one of the boys says. "We were pretty loud at one point. Was that what the call was for?" Awww Yeeeeaaaaah. We gonna rock the barn tonite!
Officers can only enter a party on private property for a noise complaint or if there is good reason to believe minors are drinking. And police say it is more difficult to find a reason to stop a horse-drawn buggy than a motor vehicle. "Boy, do you have any idea how fast you got that horse up to?"
An Amish teenager with a mop of curly dark hair stares out the window of the police car with large, frightened eyes. Rain is falling in torrents and the car’s flashing lights beat an eerie, staccato pattern across his abandoned buggy. You start out a book like that, you'd sell a million of them. WTF is this buried near the end of the article?