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“Tamara Mitchell-Ford is our Lindsay Lohan.”

The former Mrs. John Ford may not boast the celebrity status of the recently “rehabilitated” Lindsay Lohan, but the two seem to share a penchant for getting into trouble again and again.

Mitchell-Ford is facing her third DUI this year after an accident last week at Poplar and Yates. She is charged with refusing a breath alcohol test and driving on a revoked license.

Lohan has had several run-ins with the law and pled guilty to a DUI earlier this year after crashing her Mercedes into a curb on Sunset Boulevard in Beverly Hills. In a subsequent arrest, police found cocaine in Lohan’s pants pocket.

Police have not found cocaine in Mitchell-Ford’s possession, but she did have ravioli in her pocket when she was stopped for drunk driving last February.

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Ingram Hill in Wreck

Memphis-based rock band Ingram Hill had a wreck Sunday en route from a show at the Brick Bar in Oxford, Ohio, to a show at Schuba’s in Chicago.

The band lost control of its tour van after a blowout, dodged a semi, and plowed into a ditch somewhere in Indiana. Thankfully, no one was seriously injured and the band was able to get back on tour in support of their recently released album “Cold in California.”

The band returns to Memphis to play the Mid-South Fair Saturday, September 29th.

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Lawsuit Filed Against Driver in Selmer Crash

SELMER, Tenn. (AP) — The father of a teenager who was among six people killed this month when a drag-racing car spun into a crowd sued the driver and organizers of the charity event Tuesday.

Bruce Replogle, the father of 15-year-old Scarlett Replogle, seeks $10 million in damages.

Authorities say pro drag racer Troy Critchley lost control of his dragster while performing an exhibition burnout – spinning the car’s back tires to send up clouds of smoke – during a parade at the annual Cars for Kids charity event June 16. Besides the six killed, 23 were hospitalized.

Replogle alleges event organizer Larry Price failed to obtain a permit for the parade and failed to take precautions to ensure the safety of spectators. The father also accuses him of encouraging drivers to do unsafe burnouts to attract crowds, despite warnings that they were not safe.

Critchley is accused of being negligent by failing to maintain control of his vehicle and performing dangerous tricks without making sure spectators were protected.

Replogle accuses the vehicle’s owner, AMS Staff Leasing Inc., of negligence by failing to make sure the car was in proper working order and allowing it to be driven by Critchley, who had an “unsafe driving record,” the suit claims.

Critchley, who has not spoken publicly since the accident, was convicted of drunken driving in Virginia in 2000.

A call to Price’s home in Selmer went unanswered Tuesday night. He has retained Memphis attorney Steve Farese Sr., who did not immediately return a message left at his office after hours.

A message left at the Dallas office of AMS Staff Leasing was not immediately returned.

Replogle’s attorney, Lewis L. Cobb, did not immediately return a message left after business hours.

Besides damages, Replogle seeks to stop Price and Cars for Kids from holding another event in Selmer without a detailed safety plan.

© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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Selmer Drag Racer Had Prior DUI, Records Show

By Woody Baird (AP) – An Australian drag-racer whose car careened into a crowd of spectators during a car show parade, killing six young people, was convicted of drunken driving in Virginia in 2000, court records show.

Troy Warren Critchley pleaded guilty to driving while intoxicated in April 2000, according to court records from Loudoun County, Va.

He lost his driver’s license for a year and paid $381 in fines and court costs, the record shows.

Critchley lost control of the dragster Saturday during a “burnout exhibition” at a Cars for Kids charity event in Selmer, a small town about 80 miles east of Memphis.

The burnout, with the powerful car spinning its wheels and sending up clouds of smoke, was staged on a city street with no protective barriers between the dragster and hundreds of spectators lining both sides of the road.

Six spectators, ages 15 to 22, were killed and at least 23 other people were injured, many seriously.

Authorities are investigating the cause of the crash and no criminal charges have been filed.

District Attorney General Mike Dunavant said Critchley has given a blood sample that will be tested for drugs and alcohol.

No one answered the door Tuesday at Critchley’s rural home in the Dallas suburb of Rockwall, and a neighbor told The Associated Press he had not seen Critchley since the accident.

(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)