When news of George W. Bush's drunken driving arrest
surfaced during the final week of the 2000
presidential campaign, Republicans tried to dismiss it
as one of those "youthful indiscretions" Bush had
steadfastly refused to discuss. Of course, when he got
popped in Kennebunkport in 1976, Bush was 30 years
old, hardly a kid.
Vice President Dick Cheney, on the other hand, could
actually argue that his two DWIs came when he was
young and reckless.
Court and police records obtained by The Smoking Gun
show that Cheney was convicted of drunk driving twice
during an eight-month period in the early 1960s in his
home state of Wyoming. The two convictions came when
Cheney was 21 and 22 and resulted in fines and a brief
suspension of his driver's license.
On November 2, in the wake of the Bush DWI discovery,
a Cheney spokesperson told reporters that the vice
presidential candidate also had a rap sheet. But the
Bush-Cheney campaign refused to provide any further
details about the DWI busts. So TSG will now handle
that chore.
Cheney first privately disclosed the arrests in 1989,
after he had been nominated for Secretary of Defense.
According to an account in Bob Woodward's "The
Commanders," Cheney told members of the Senate Armed
Services committee about the DWI arrests during a
closed confirmation hearing. Cheney told the senators
that he believed it would be best to publicly disclose
the busts. But Armed Services committee members said
there was no need for the disclosure and subsequently
confirmed Cheney in a 20-0 vote.
Following the May 1991 publication of Woodward's book,
there was no mention of Cheney's arrests until the
brief confirmation offered by the candidate's
spokesperson last November. But the vice president
himself mentioned his rap sheet in an interview in the
current issue (dated May 7) of The New Yorker. Cheney
noted that after dropping out of Yale in early 1961,
he found himself "working, building power lines,
having been in a couple of scrapes with the law." The
busts, he said, made him "think about where I was and
where I was headed. I was headed down
a bad road, if I continued on that course."
Cheney's first DWI conviction came in November 1962
when he was 21. According to this docket from
Cheyenne's Municipal Court, Cheney was nailed for
drunkenness and "operating motor vehicle while
intoxicated." A Cheyenne Police Judge found Cheney
guilty of the two charges and hit him with a 30-day
suspension of his driver's license. Cheney also had to
forfeit a $150 bond posted at the time of his arrest.
Further information about the case--such as the
defendant's blood alcohol content or whether Cheney
was jailed following the bust--is unavailable since
other court records from that period have been
destroyed, according to Wyoming officials.
Details of Cheney's second Wyoming arrest, in July
1963, have also fallen victim to time and records
destruction practices at the local Municipal Court.
But a police arrest card (similar to the one that
haunted Dubya) maintained by the Rock Springs Police
Department shows that Cheney was fined $100 for his
second DWI conviction. The card lists the charge
against Cheney, who was then working as a groundman
laying power lines, as "11-44," the criminal code
classification for drunken driving, according to
Police Chief Neil Kourbelas. At the time of the Rock
Springs arrest, Kourbelas said that local cops and
judges would not have known that young Cheney was a
boozing 'n driving recidivist. The police department,
Kourbelas said, "wouldn't have had the ability to
automatically check with other jurisdictions to find
out if anyone had had prior arrests or convictions. We
could have arrested Jack the Ripper back then and had
no idea what he had done."
Since that second Wyoming arrest, Cheney has kept his
nose clean.
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