cdc.gov/ncipc/factsheets/teenmvh.htm
That link is to the CDC and you will find this information and more:
**In the U.S. during 2004, 4,767 teens ages 16 to 19 died of injuries caused by motor vehicle crashes. During 2005, nearly 400,000 motor vehicle occupants in this age group sustained nonfatal injuries severe enough to require treatment in an emergency department (CDC 2006).
The risk of motor vehicle crashes is higher among 16- to 19-year-olds than among any other age group. In fact, per mile driven, teen drivers ages 16 to 19 are four times more likely than older drivers to crash (IIHS 2006).
In 2005, teenagers accounted for 10 percent of the U.S. population and 12 percent of motor vehicle crash deaths (IIHS 2006).
The presence of teen passengers increases the crash risk of unsupervised teen drivers; the risk increases with the number of teen passengers (Chen 2000).
Further, as to the effects of “alcohol” on teens:
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* At all levels of blood alcohol concentration (BAC), the risk of involvement in a motor vehicle crash is greater for teens than for older drivers (IIHS 2006).
o In 2005, 23% of drivers ages 15 to 20 who died in motor vehicle crashes had a BAC of 0.08 g/dl or higher (NHTSA 2006b).
o In a national survey conducted in 2005, nearly 30% of teens reported that within the previous month, they had ridden with a driver who had been drinking alcohol. One in ten reported having driven after drinking alcohol within the same one-month period (CDC 2006b).
o In 2005, among teen drivers who were killed in motor vehicle crashes after drinking and driving, 74% were unrestrained (NHTSA 2006b).
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* In 2005, half of teen deaths from motor vehicle crashes occurred between 3 p.m. and midnight and 54% occurred on Friday, Saturday, or Sunday (IIHS 2006).
Now what this all translates to is that 1200 teenagers died in wrecks because of alcohol. Another 100,000 or more were injured severely enough to be treated at an Emergency Room or hospitalized.**
You are to be commended for being concerned about the situation. I remember when I was a young man…I though I was “bulletproof”…and all the rest… but I had friends who had wrecks, dui’s and some who were injured…including one who didn’t make it to the car…he was drunk at a party to welcome him home from Vietnam…he was 19…he dove into the shallow end of a swimming pool and broke his neck…he spent the next couple of years in traction and all that…
You do what you have to do to keep your friends out of the drivers seat. Even if it takes pulling the rotor out of the distributor, or fuses out of the panel …its best to pull the one for the starter, that way they don’t damage it.
Tell the cops…they’ll understand especially if you let them know early enough, and their presence may well provide enough of a dampener that your friends will chill out and not overdue it.
It may not seem cool to do what you have to do to protect these people, but you obviously cared enough to come and ask the question…if you need motivation…remember, there is nothing cool about a funeral for a young friend or several friends…