You might consider phoning the local station (anonymously) or have someone do it on your behalf giving your husband's details (car description, location, reg no) as a suspected drunk driver if you genuinely believe your husband is a danger to himself or others and is driving under the influence.
I have no problem whatsoever with your point of view - I was involved elsewhere in a discussion along similar lines - that law-breaking guards may be treated differently to law-breaking civilians, etc. That aside, I believe OP needs to do the right thing. If the need arises and a report gets made, if an accident happens subsequently at least the OP has done all she can to avoid it. She is powerless over the actions of others, the law-breaker and law-enforcement.I agree with this but given the information in the opening post that he is a guard himself I fear this may be a lost cause. ...
Yes the document seems to have the right level of management lingo (including my pet hate,"proactive"). Presumably the local EA rep is contactable by OP and she is confident the Chinese walls will hold up.... Update: see .
The Gardai (used) to have an in house service for their own members to deal with situations similar to the OP. it used to be a very comprehensive service that acts fast and handles all situations and circumstances. I'm surprised you were not aware of this. Contact your husbands superior officer immediately.
And the best of luck to you and your family as well as your husband.
Thanks so much, all of your help was invaluable and has given me the confidence to contact Al Anon. It wont be a solution but it's a start.
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