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Friday, September 1, 2006 - Page updated at 05:07 PM

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McGavick stumbled, fell asleep after DUI arrest, 13-year-old report says

Seattle Times staff reporter

U.S. Senate candidate Mike McGavick was stumbling drunk when he was pulled over by a Montgomery County, Md., sheriff's deputy 13 years ago, and he understated how much he had had to drink, according to the deputy's arrest report.

McGavick failed all of the standard field sobriety tests before his arrest and fell asleep in the jail while waiting to be booked, said the report, which was obtained Thursday night by The Seattle Times. His blood-alcohol level was .17 percent, more than double the legal limit of .08 percent in both Maryland and Washington. The report notes that the blood-alcohol test was administered an hour and a half after McGavick's arrest.

McGavick, a Republican, is challenging Sen. Maria Cantwell. He has characterized his drunk-driving arrest one of "two great failures" in his life. The other was a divorce.

The deputy pulled McGavick's white Mazda Miata over about 3:30 a.m. on Nov. 21, 1993, after he watched it "drive through a steady red signal." McGavick said last week, when his campaign acknowledged the existence of his drunk-driving arrest, that he had he cut a yellow light too close.

The deputy approached the car and reported that when McGavick rolled the window down he "could detect a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage from the interior."

"(I) then asked McGavick how much he had to drink tonight McGavick responded, 'Oh, I don't know – two, maybe three beers," the report said.

Last Friday, McGavick acknowledged that he had been drinking beer for hours at three parties before he was pulled over.

Blood-alcohol level calculators available on the Internet note that a 180-pound man would have to drink more than eight beers in an hour to achieve a blood-alcohol level of .17 percent.

The deputy wrote that McGavick failed each of three field sobriety tests: the so-called "horizontal gaze test," which measures how smoothly an individual's eyes can track an object. If the eyes jerk at a certain point, it may mean an individual is impaired. Both of McGavick's eye's jerked as the deputy monitored their movement.

McGavick also failed the heel-to-toe walk. "McGavick shifted his feet and stumbled once," the deputy wrote. He was also unable to stand on one leg and could not follow the deputy's instructions.

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"(I) then instructed McGavick the one-leg stand test. McGavick attempted to begin the test three times and was reportedly told ... not to begin until told to do so," the deputy wrote. McGavick lost his balance and had to put his foot down after just 15 seconds. "He swayed through the test, hopped up and down and put his foot down again at 21 seconds, 27, 28 and 29 seconds," the report said.

McGavick was transported to a sheriff's substation, where he "consented to a test of his breath. During processing, McGavick fell asleep," the report said.

Mike Carter: 206-464-3706 or mcarter@seattletimes.com

Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company

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