Teen From Palatine Urinates on Driveway During DUI Arrest on Clarendon Rd Near Princeton Ave, Arlington Heights

#ad▼

Arlington Heights police arrested a DUI driver about 10:19 PM Saturday in the block of 1300 West Clarendon Road Arlington Heights, IL. Officers responded to a report of a subject who drove into a snow bank adjacent to a residential driveway. A juvenile male offender was found standing in the driveway. He had a strong odor of alcoholic beverage on his breath. Empty bottles of Corona beer were found in the vehicle.

While talking to an officer, the juvenile turned around, walked away and began to urinate on the driveway. When he was being placed into custody, he refused to comply and began to struggle. He was handcuffed, but continued to struggle while being walked to the squad car.

Police transported the driver in custody to Arlington Heights Police Department Headquarters. The juvenile offender continued to be combative at the police station and pushed an officer. the juvenile was identified as a male, age 16, from Palatine.

The driver’s vehicle was towed to a police holding area.

The juvenile was charged with …
Aggravated DUI (no driver’s license)
Battery
Resisting a Police Officer
Illegal transportation of alcohol
DUI
Driving without a driver’s license

Court date was not available.

http://maps.google.com/?q=1300+West+Clarendon+Road+Arlington+Heights,+IL&t=h&z=17&layer=t


Get updates from The Cardinal CRIME BLOG ‘Plus’ on Facebook. Just ‘LIKE’ the ‘Arlington Cardinal Crime & Forensics’ Page (become a fan of our page). The updates cover all posts in the 24/7 Crime Alerts! and sub-categories. See all of The Cardinal Facebook fan pages at Arlingtoncardinal.com/about/facebook …

Search Amazon …

Search for products sold on Amazon:

Arlingtoncardinal.com is an Amazon Associate website, which means that a small percentage of your purchases gets paid to Arlingtoncardinal.com at no extra cost to you. When you use the search boxes above, any Amazon banner ad, or any product associated with an Amazon banner on this website, you help pay expenses related to maintaining Arlingtoncardinal.com and creating new services and ideas for a resourceful website. See more info at Arlingtoncardinal.com/AdDisclosure

2 Comments

  1. He had a strong odor of alcoholic beverage on his breath? How about he smelled like alcohol? Good site, but really should shorten article titles so they are more understandable.

  2. He had a strong odor of alcoholic beverage on his breath? How about he smelled like alcohol?

    Jeff … The sentence is quoted from the police report. In court, there is a big difference between smelling like alcohol, and having a strong odor of alcoholic beverage on your breath. A defense lawyer can win a case if the police report doesn’t have enough specific observations that support the officer’s determination that the driver was impaired. Details are related to probable cause to believe that the defendant committed the offense of DUI. Often there is a big long list of observations to support probable cause: glassy eyes, red eyes, bloodshot eyes, flushed face, slurred speech, admission of drinking, crossing the center line, hitting the curb, failure to advance at a green light, speeding, turning with a wide radius, swerving, drifting, driving on the wrong side of the road, stopping inappropriately, signaling inconsistent with driving actions.

    Titles are designated so readers can get the gist of the article without even opening the article, or to promote content that might be unique compared to other articles.

Comments are closed.