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Burroughs High students get a sobering reminder with ‘Every 15 Minutes’

During the "Every 15 Minutes" simulation, students watch as Burbank Fire Department personnel tend to mock-accident victim Randy Tobin in front of Burroughs High School, in Burbank on Thursday, April 21, 2016. "Every 15 Minutes" is a program with real cars, police, fire and coroner department personnel and students who act out a scene of a multiple-vehicle accident with fatalities, all with the goal of warning students of the dangers of drunk driving.

During the “Every 15 Minutes” simulation, students watch as Burbank Fire Department personnel tend to mock-accident victim Randy Tobin in front of Burroughs High School, in Burbank on Thursday, April 21, 2016. “Every 15 Minutes” is a program with real cars, police, fire and coroner department personnel and students who act out a scene of a multiple-vehicle accident with fatalities, all with the goal of warning students of the dangers of drunk driving.

(Raul Roa / Staff Photographer)
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When a friend called her a coward for not drinking enough alcohol, Emily Cox downed three shots, back to back, during the middle of a school day.

Cameras followed the 17-year-old as she stumbled to her car and climbed behind the wheel to head back to school, with her friend in the passenger seat.

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The scene was completely staged.

But what followed on the script became a sobering reminder for 1,250 John Burroughs High School juniors and seniors about the consequences of drinking and driving.

The video, prepared as part of the two-day “Every 15 Minutes” program, went on to show the aftermath of a staged collision in which Cox fatally struck her teacher’s husband, who was crossing the street after having lunch on the school lawn with his wife and son.

That included the student’s arrest and subsequent court hearing, in which she was handed a 10-year prison sentence.

Though staged, the situation was all too real for Cox, who lost two family members after a drunk-driving collision in 2005.

“It was hard to be put in a position where I had to do it to someone else,” she said.

The program, organized by the school along with Burbank police and fire officials as well as the California Highway Patrol, serves to empower all students to speak up and take away the keys from friends who try to drive after drinking, said Kenny Knoop, assistant principal of athletics and activities.

This year marked the first since 2009 that the school hosted the program.

“A lot of education doesn’t come with Common Core, doesn’t come with the textbook,” Knoop said. “That’s what this is about.”

The roughly dozen students involved in dramatizing the daytime party and subsequent crash spent this week touring a local funeral home, as well as Burbank’s police and fire headquarters, courthouse and a local junkyard.

Along for the police-station tour was Officer Sean Toth, whose worst day in 22 years in law enforcement came three years ago, when he was assigned the task of notifying the families of five young people killed in a fiery drunk-driving crash in Burbank.

Participating in this week’s program was labor-intensive, but incredibly rewarding for Toth.

“I would do it a million times over if it saved one life,” he said.

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Alene Tchekmedyian, alene.tchekmedyian@latimes.com

Twitter: @atchek

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