Former Seattle Seahawks antercanca Richard Sherman has been accused of driving under the influence more than a year After his arrest.
A Washington State soldier detained Sherman 37, in the early hours of February 24, 2024, for driving his Tesla 79 miles per hour in an area of 60 mph. The “Sherman vehicle was observed by bouncing and forward inside the traveling lane”, according to the probable cause Documents obtained of Komo News.
Sherman told the officer that he had not had “ton” to drink, but he had two daisies.
“I noticed that Sherman’s eyes were blood and aqueous. I also noticed the smell of poisoning from Sherman’s breathing,” the soldier wrote. “” Sherman swinging and forward as the test (field sobriety) was also observed. “”
The five times Pro Bowler also rejected multiple preliminary breathing tests.
“While talking to Sherman, I noticed that it was argumentative and showing mood changes, because at times it would be compatible and would not fulfill other times,” says the document.
The soldier filed a search for a legal blood draw, and Sherman was taken to a local hospital for the tests.
In terms of delay in his post, the King County Prosecutor’s Office did not receive the results of the test until Tuesday, June 17.
“It is not uncommon for the results of the Blood Test to take months to return from the State Patrol Lab, regardless of the DUI accused of crime,” was the Communications Director of the KCPAO. Casey McERNTHNEY He told Komo News.
A DUI detention in Washington is usually charged as a gross crime, giving authorities up to two years to pursue, according to the State Statute of State limitations. Sherman will be tried on June 30 in the King County District Court in Redmond, Washington.
Since Sherman had a previous DUI post in the last ten years, he was reserved for a King County prison on the night of his arrest. Sherman was also arrested in 2021 and was found guilty of multiple crime officials after he was accused of being under the influence when he allegedly entered the house of his in -laws after accelerating a construction zone.
As part of a supplication agreement, Sherman agreed to pay court fees, serve the community and be under court for up to two years.
“I am grateful for the support of my family and friends … and grateful to have the conversations I have had,” he said at that moment in court. “I am grateful for the community we have and for the way people continue to accept that you are a defective human being and made a mistake.”