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Originally published Friday, October 23, 2009 at 12:15 AM

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Man admits driving drunk in custom La-Z-Boy

A Minnesota man pleaded guilty this week to driving his customized recliner — decked out with a lawnmower engine and cup holders — while drunk.

Star Tribune

MINNEAPOLIS — The operator of a La-Z-Boy chair converted into a motorized vehicle — complete with a stereo and cup holders — has admitted he crashed the recliner after leaving a bar in Proctor, Minn., extremely drunk.

Dennis LeRoy Anderson, 61, of Proctor, pleaded guilty Monday to hopping on the chair on the night of Aug. 31, 2008, after visiting the bar, and then crashing into a more traditional vehicle in the parking lot. Anderson's blood-alcohol content was 0.29 percent, more than three times the legal limit for driving in Minnesota.

Deputy Police Chief Troy Foucault said Thursday that the chair is "quite decked out." Along with the stereo and cup holders, it is powered by a converted gasoline-powered lawnmower, a steering wheel, headlights and a power antenna.

Foucault said the La-Z-Boy can top out at 15 to 20 mph. A National Hot Rod Association sticker adorns the headrest.

The chair was impounded and will be sold at the next police auction.

"We have quite a few people calling about buying it," said Foucault, who half-seriously acknowledged that he's tempted to bid on it, except, "I have kids who would take it out and drive it on the street."

Anderson admitted to police that he had been drinking at home, was leaving the bar and had drunk eight or nine beers that day before getting on the La-Z-Boy and crashing it into a Dodge Intrepid parked outside, Foucault said. Anderson was treated for minor injuries and given a field sobriety test, according to the police report.

"He failed everything," Foucault said, leading to Anderson's arrest and seizure of the chair. The officer checked Anderson's driver's license and determined it had been revoked because of a previous drunken-driving conviction, according to police.

Anderson, who does auto-body repair work out of his home, was sentenced Monday to 180 days of confinement and was fined $2,000. The jail time and half of the fine was stayed for two years of supervised probation with conditions that include a chemical-dependency assessment, random testing and 30 days of electronic monitoring.

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