Drunk Man Pulls Cop Over, Asks To Be Arrested
POSTED: 7:12 am EDT August 10, 2004
UPDATED: 10:49 am EDT August 10, 2004
WEIRD PHOTOS: News Of The Strange Slideshow
VERNON, Vt. -- It's not often that police get pulled over by a drunk driver.
It happened recently to Police Chief Ian McCollin, who was in his car when he spotted a driver looking befuddled at an intersection.
Thinking the man might be lost, McCollin stopped on the side of the road. The man pulled alongside of him, rolled down his window and announced he was looking for an officer to arrest him because he was drunk.
McCollin was so startled he called for backup.
"I was just a little nervous about it," he said. "It just wasn't natural."
The man, Bryan S. Condo, 28, showed a non-driver's I.D., and said his license had been criminally suspended. He said he already has been arrested once for driving drunk.
In a preliminary breath test, Condo registered more than four times the 0.08 legal limit, McCollin said.
McCollin said Condo wasn't combative, as is typical in such cases.
"He was a gentleman, very polite and very cooperative," he said. "I think he was looking for or needs help."
Condo was cited for second-offense DUI and driving with a suspended license.
POSTED: 7:12 am EDT August 10, 2004
UPDATED: 10:49 am EDT August 10, 2004
WEIRD PHOTOS: News Of The Strange Slideshow
VERNON, Vt. -- It's not often that police get pulled over by a drunk driver.
It happened recently to Police Chief Ian McCollin, who was in his car when he spotted a driver looking befuddled at an intersection.
Thinking the man might be lost, McCollin stopped on the side of the road. The man pulled alongside of him, rolled down his window and announced he was looking for an officer to arrest him because he was drunk.
McCollin was so startled he called for backup.
"I was just a little nervous about it," he said. "It just wasn't natural."
The man, Bryan S. Condo, 28, showed a non-driver's I.D., and said his license had been criminally suspended. He said he already has been arrested once for driving drunk.
In a preliminary breath test, Condo registered more than four times the 0.08 legal limit, McCollin said.
McCollin said Condo wasn't combative, as is typical in such cases.
"He was a gentleman, very polite and very cooperative," he said. "I think he was looking for or needs help."
Condo was cited for second-offense DUI and driving with a suspended license.
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