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Do This In Case Of Emergency
The state of Florida has a database that you can update with contacts so that police can contact family / friends in case of an accident, etc.
Register your emergency contacts at https://www6.hsmv.state.fl.us/dlcheck/findcustomer
or in person at any Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles location.
TBO.com
By VALERIE KALFRIN
TAMPA - For almost two days, the family of a 56-year-old woman who died after being rear-ended on Dale Mabry Highway late Wednesday was unaware of her death, officials said.
Troopers with the Florida Highway Patrol knocked on every door of an apartment complex there on Friday until they found the brother of Chang Lee, who was fatally injured south of Van Dyke Road about 10 p.m. New Year's Eve. Authorities hadn't been able to locate a valid apartment number for him, the Florida Highway Patrol said.
State law prohibits investigators from publicly identifying a person who has died until his or her family has been notified. Extraordinary circumstances, such as family living out of the country, have caused authorities to release victims' names in the media without notification, but only after exhaustive efforts, law enforcement officials say.
"It's really not an appropriate way for a family member to find out a loved one has died," Tampa police spokeswoman Andrea Davis said.
With that in mind, highway patrol Sgt. Steve Gaskins on Friday urged motorists to take advantage of the state's free "emergency contact enrollment program," available online and through the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.
The program was established in 2006 through the efforts of State Rep. Bill Galvano R-Bradenton, and a Manatee County woman, Christine Olson. Olson founded To Inform Families First after her daughter, Tiffany, 22, and her daughter's friend died in a motorcycle crash in 2005. Troopers reached Olson roughly six hours after the crash because of a lack of contact information.
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