NFL's all-time sack leader Smith pleads guilty to DUI
Former NFL star Bruce Smith pleaded guilty to drunken driving
Thursday, saying he wanted to own up to his mistake and strive to
be an asset to the community.
Smith, 46, was fined $1,000 and given a 90-day suspended
sentence in a plea agreement with Virginia Beach prosecutors, who
dropped charges of speeding and refusal to take a breath test. He
also must complete an alcohol safety program, and his driving
privileges will be limited for one year.
Smith's restricted license will allow him to drive only for
work, medical appointments, to visit his elderly mother, to attend
the alcohol program and to take his children to and from medical
appointments and school.
The NFL's all-time sacks leader, who was inducted into the
Pro Football Hall of Fame in August, had been convicted of the
drunken driving charge in General District Court in July.
In Virginia a person convicted in General District court can
appeal to Circuit Court and get a retrial. Smith appealed, and his
retrial had been set for Thursday morning.
"The risk versus reward was not in our favor," Smith told
reporters outside the courtroom. He said he had a 50-50 chance of
beating the drunken-driving charge but still would have to contend
with the other charges.
"As I have said, I was having some wine at dinner with
friends," Smith said of the night he was arrested. "I thought it
was in my best interests to take ownership of that evening."
Smith told reporters he has hired a former state trooper to
accompany him when he meets friends for dinner in the future.
Putting the matter behind him, Smith said, would allow him to
"concentrate on being an asset to the community."
Smith was stopped on Interstate 264 in May and was charged
with DUI after failing field sobriety tests. His attorney, Larry
Cardon, said at Smith's first trial that the 19-year NFL veteran's
11 knee surgeries made it difficult for him to walk a straight line
heel-to-toe and stand on one leg for 30 seconds.
Smith, who played for the Buffalo Bills and Washington
Redskins and appeared in 11 Pro Bowls, had two previous DUI
arrests. A 1997 conviction was later dismissed, and he was
acquitted in another case in 2003.