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Rep. Patrick Kennedy reaches DUI plea deal

Congressman avoids jail for wreck near Capitol while on prescription drugs

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Kennedy pleads guilty to DUI
June 13: Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., addresses the media after pleading guilty to driving under the influence of prescription drugs.

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updated 5:28 p.m. ET June 13, 2006

WASHINGTON - Rep. Patrick Kennedy pleaded guilty Tuesday to driving under the influence of prescription drugs and was sentenced to undergo court-ordered drug treatment and a year’s probation.

Kennedy, D-R.I., also was fined at least $350 in connection with his middle-of-the-night car crash last month near the U.S. Capitol.

In exchange, two other charges against Kennedy were dismissed: Reckless driving and failure to exhibit a driving permit.

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Accompanied by his lawyer, Kennedy entered his plea Tuesday afternoon before Superior Court Magistrate Judge Aida Melendez.

“I am pleading guilty to driving under the influence,” Kennedy said.

Melendez ordered Kennedy to undergo court-monitored drug treatment, and pay $350 — $250 of which would go to the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Washington, and $100 to a crime victims fund. She also gave Kennedy a 10-day jail sentence that he would serve if he violated the terms of his probation.

“Today in court, I suffered the consequences of my actions,” Kennedy told reporters outside the courthouse. “I look forward today to moving on to the next chapter in my life.”
NBC on the scene

Following a plea agreement to Judge Ada Melendez, Rep. Patrick Kennedy:

-Will be under court supervision for not less than 12 months
-Must report weekly to Dr. Ronald Smith at Bethesda Naval Hospital. He must meet weekly with a group with Dr. Smith.
-Must go to weekly AA meetings
-Must have random drug tests
-Must have regular weekly contact with his psychiatrist who prescribes his medicine
-Must participate in a D.C. program of drug treatment
-A doctor must give a written report every month to the probation officer
-Must pay a $100 fine for victim impact fund
-Must attend a victim impact panel
-Will have his D.C. Driver's License suspended
-Must perform 50 hours of community service at the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Washington, D.C.
-Must make a $250 donation to the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Washington, D.C.
-Must pay a $300 fine (the maximum)

The judge said, “I'm not bound by this plea agreement, and I want to give you 10 days in jail plus a $300 fine.” Then she stayed the 10 days but said if Kennedy broke any conditions of the probation, he would go to jail for 10 days.


From NBC producer Debbie Pettit

Kennedy returned to Congress last week after nearly a month of treatment for addiction to prescription pain drugs at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota.

The six-term congressman, who has struggled with addiction since high school, had entered the clinic one day after the May 4 crash on Capitol Hill that he said he could not remember.

The accident has raised questions about whether Kennedy, 38, was drinking and had received special treatment by police, who did not conduct field sobriety tests. Kennedy has denied consuming alcohol before the crash.

Took three prescription drugs
In the hours before the crash, Kennedy said he returned home from work and took a sleeping pill, Ambien, and Phenergan, a prescription anti-nausea drug that can cause drowsiness. He said he did not consume alcohol.

Kennedy crashed his green 1997 Ford Mustang convertible into a security barrier near the Capitol about 3 a.m. The officer listed alcohol influence as a contributing factor in the crash and noted that Kennedy was “ability impaired,” with red, watery eyes, slurred speech and unsteady balance, according to the accident report.

Police did not conduct field sobriety tests on Kennedy. A police union official has said the officers involved in the accident were instructed by a superior to take the congressman home. Kennedy has denied asking for special treatment.

Police had observed Kennedy’s car, with no headlights on, swerve into the wrong lane and strike a curb. Kennedy nearly hit a police car, the report said, and did not respond to the officer’s efforts to pull him over. He continued at a slower speed before hitting a security barrier head-on, the report said.

Kennedy told the police officer he was “headed to the Capitol to make a vote,” the report said. He was cited for failure to keep in the proper lane, traveling at “unreasonable speed” and failing to “give full time and attention” to operating his vehicle.

Kennedy’s office has said that it has not received those initial citations.

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