SACRAMENTO, Calif.—A Republican state senator from Bakersfield was arrested early Wednesday on suspicion of drunken driving near the state Capitol, according to the California Highway Patrol.
Lt. Jay Bart said Sen. Roy Ashburn was spotted driving erratically about 2:10 a.m. in downtown Sacramento. He was arrested after a sobriety test and was taken to Sacramento County Jail, where he was given a blood-alcohol test. He then was booked and released.
Bart said he is prohibited from releasing Ashburn's blood-alcohol level.
"I am deeply sorry for my actions and offer no excuse for my poor judgment. I accept complete responsibility for my conduct and am prepared to accept the consequences for what I did," Ashburn said in a statement issued through his Senate office. "I am also truly sorry for the impact this incident will have on those who support and trust me—my family, my constituents, my friends, and my colleagues in the Senate."
Ashburn, who is 55, represents a district that includes Kern, Tulare, Inyo and San Bernardino counties.
He is termed out this year after eight years in the Senate and six years in the Assembly.
Friday, May 28, 2010
Saturday, May 15, 2010
Sacramento man gets long prison stretch after drug-fueled run-in with Roseville cops
A Sacramento man with a long criminal record must serve 25 years to life in prison after his 2009 meth-laced run in with the Roseville Police Department.
Anthony Joseph DiBernardo, 50, of Sacramento, was convicted in Placer Superior Court this week for driving under the influence and resisting an officer.
In May, DiBernardo was pulled over for driving with expired registration. During the stop, the responding officer suspected DiBernardo was under the influence of a substance. The Placer County District Attorney's Office said DiBernardo attempted to swallow a plastic bag of methamphetamine and wrestled with the officer.
The DUI and resisting counts triggered a mandatory 25-to-life sentence.
His record includes an 1988 crime spree that included a three-home burglary binge and an attempted rape of a 14-year-old girl, offenses committed before the state's three-strikes mandatory sentencing law took effect.
During this week's sentencing, DiBernardo sought to have his old convictions disregarded -- an argument Judge Joseph O'Flaherty rejected.
Prosecutor Benjamin Eggert argued that DiBernardo continued to break the law in the 1990s. His more recent crimes included a misdemeanor assault with a deadly weapon and twice failing to register as a sex offender.
"This guy had his chances," Eggert said. "He's exactly the kind of person the three-strikes law was written for."
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Anthony Joseph DiBernardo, 50, of Sacramento, was convicted in Placer Superior Court this week for driving under the influence and resisting an officer.
In May, DiBernardo was pulled over for driving with expired registration. During the stop, the responding officer suspected DiBernardo was under the influence of a substance. The Placer County District Attorney's Office said DiBernardo attempted to swallow a plastic bag of methamphetamine and wrestled with the officer.
The DUI and resisting counts triggered a mandatory 25-to-life sentence.
His record includes an 1988 crime spree that included a three-home burglary binge and an attempted rape of a 14-year-old girl, offenses committed before the state's three-strikes mandatory sentencing law took effect.
During this week's sentencing, DiBernardo sought to have his old convictions disregarded -- an argument Judge Joseph O'Flaherty rejected.
Prosecutor Benjamin Eggert argued that DiBernardo continued to break the law in the 1990s. His more recent crimes included a misdemeanor assault with a deadly weapon and twice failing to register as a sex offender.
"This guy had his chances," Eggert said. "He's exactly the kind of person the three-strikes law was written for."
Source
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