Sports Legal: Former Longhorn Vince Young released from jail after DWI arrest

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
Former Longhorn Vince Young released from jail after DWI arrest



11:35 a.m. update: A woman violated jail protocol when she picked up former Longhorn quarterback Vince Young on Monday at the Travis County Jail after his arrest for driving while intoxicated Sunday night, authorities said.

She was able to enter the jail’s vehicle area around 10 a.m. in a black Range Rover while Young was released inside the jail. The two drove off in her vehicle.

Jail protocol is to release people by having them walk outside the jail through the front entrance, and people are only allowed to drive out if there is a threat to the person’s safety, said Roger Wade, Travis County sheriff’s office spokesman.


Vince Young
“It was a new supervisor’s error in judgment, and we’ll make sure it doesn’t happen again,” Wade said. “The supervisor took pity on the man and let him go out the back door.”

The major at the jail was upset by this breach in protocol and will address this mistake, Wade said.

The former University of Texas football star was arrested late Sunday for DWIafter being pulled over on Interstate 35 near Airport Boulevard. It’s the latest setback for Young, a Houston native who just last month was honored by the UIL for his induction into the Texas Sports Hall of Fame.


Vince Young’s mug shot from his Sunday night arrest.
10 a.m. update: Austin police arrested former University of Texas quarterback Vince Young after anofficer says he saw Young driving erratically Sunday night.

The arresting officer wrote in an arrest affidavit that Young smelled strongly of alcohol. He also wrote that Young’s balance was swaying and unsure and that he showed the same symptoms of intoxication while walking. Young was not cooperative with the officer but remained polite, the affidavit said.

Young admitted to drinking three or four bottles of beer at the W Austin hotel before driving. When asked, Young said he did not know what time it was before guessing that it was around 2:30 a.m. It was 11:23 p.m., the officer wrote.


Photos: Vince Young through the years

Young stumbled during a field sobriety test known as the “walk and turn,” the affidavit said. After he stumbled, he refused to perform any other field sobriety tests and did not provide a breath or blood sample to determine his blood alcohol content, the affidavit said.

Young’s speech was slurred and thick-tongued and he mumbled, the affidavit said.

The officer said Young’s clothing were mussed and his eyes were glassy. Young laughed at one point, which the officer found odd, the affidavit said.

Young was stopped at a traffic light on the Interstate 35 service road at Sixth Street when he first garnered the attention of the arresting officer. The officer wrote in an arrest affidavit that after the light turned green, Young did not begin to drive for about 10 seconds.

The officer followed as Young drove between 25 to 30 mph on the service road before entering the main northbound lanes at 15th Street, police said.

The officer said he saw Young’s pickup drift within its lane while traveling between 42 and 60 mph. On the upper deck of the highway, Young accelerated to 68 mph, where the officer saw the pickup’s tires drift to the solid yellow line in the left lane.

Young eventually exited the highway near Airport Boulevard and was arrested at 11:16 p.m.

9:40 a.m. update: Austin police say they arrested Longhorn football legend Vince Young Sunday night during a traffic stop on the Interstate 35 service road.

Police arrested Young, 32, at 11:16 p.m. during the traffic stop, which happened in the 4600 block of the North I-35 service road near Airport Boulevard. Travis County Jail records showed Young was still in jail at 9:35 a.m. Monday.

Earlier: Former University of Texas football quarterback Vince Young was arrested in Austin on a misdemeanor charge of driving while intoxicated.

He was booked into Travis County Jail at 12:46 a.m. Monday, records show.

He has appeared before a Travis County judge, who set his bail at $2,000, court officials said.

As a quarterback at UT, he led the Longhorns to victory over University of Southern California in the 2006 Rose Bowl. He later went on to play in the NFL for six seasons.

Young now serves as a diversity and community engagement officer in the Division of Diversity and Community Engagement at the University of Texas at Austin and helps raising money to support the division’s many educational programs, according to school officials.
 
Vince is a grown man. He doesn't need a baby sitter . Yet the brotha number #2774737378 needs a mentor the Whiteman set him up to fail brigade has surrounded the post.
 
Fuck; UT set him up with a pretty cush gig with guaranteed state paper and retirement benefits and he potentially fucked that up. :smh:

He should have never admitted to drinking anything and just STFU and refused to say or do more; smart thing was to refuse all other tests after stumbling; I'm sure his attorney can argue football; bad knees, concussions, etc, caused him to stumble.

Still, man HAS to make better choices.
 
are kats seriously trying to blame this on Jeff Fischer????? :cmonson:
Not total blame, but Fischer's treatment did play a small part. It made no sense for this dude to get pushed out the NFL the way he did, especially hen I hear about Ryan Mallet getting new contracts and the Browns trying hard to keep Johnny Manzel.
 
I really thought Vince would be what Cam is today.



While,I agree the difference between Vince and Cam is that Cam has a coach that believes in him 100% and was patient with his development...

If,Vince had a coach that believed in him,I think he would of been in the Superbowl and possibly win it :dunno:
 
Not total blame, but Fischer's treatment did play a small part. It made no sense for this dude to get pushed out the NFL the way he did, especially hen I hear about Ryan Mallet getting new contracts and the Browns trying hard to keep Johnny Manzel.


Vince Young was 31-19 despite having a coach who didn't like him...You have quarterbacks like Rex Grossman,Matt Hasselbeck still in the league and yet nobody really gave him a chance to compete for a starting job...

As,for Manziel..he's out of Cleveland,I don't know what they're doing,but one of the conditions for getting Hue Jackson is that they have to get rid of him...I'm going to assuming the Browns is trying to trade him or out right cut him,but he's done in Cleveland.
 
some of you mofokrs will do anything to avoid a mofokr having any personal responsibility. So it is everybodies fault that Young is a lush.

Stop making excuses for cats bad decisions.....You act like he was at Fishers house doing shots and Fisher let him drive drunk.

Dude is a drunk because he blew a 58 million dollar contract with 26 million guaranteed. And for somebody that is such a victim who you think gave him a job ?

Why you cats keep saying he had a coach that didn't like him ? What about the 5 other coaches ? They didn't like him either ?

A young multimillionaire can still have fun. But smart young multimillionaires listen.

Plenty of people tried talking to Young. He certainly got an earful at the 2006 rookie symposium, where the NFL makes draftees sit through four days of cautionary tales.

They were lectures on career planning, life skills and financial advice. Ex-players talked about where they went wrong.

Young probably sat there smugly glancing down at his Ferrari owner’s manual. He believed the commercials that dubbed him “In-Vince-ible.”

That’s how you end up letting a friendly defense attorney become your agent and handle your investments. The other partner was Young’s uncle, a middle-school teacher with no business experience.

It seems the only good investment Young made was in the Austin restaurant. All he probably did was lend his revered name to it, but at least the joint is still in business.

Otherwise, Young is out of NFL business. All that raw talent was never enough. There were too many immature breakdowns and blown plays. The last completion Young made in Tennessee came when he threw his shoulder pads into the stands.

He went to Philadelphia, where Michael Vick was resurrecting Michael Vick.

Vick had learned from his mistakes to the point he was lecturing rookies. If Young started listening, it was too late.

The Eagles released him, then the Bills. His lifestyle is built on an NFL salary, and the money isn’t coming in. Young is suing his advisors, saying they ripped him off.

They claim Young approved every deal and his real problem is irresponsibility. “A common occurrence,” the counter-suit reads, “as Jeff Fisher, Mack Brown, numerous NFL executives, coaches, teammates, scouts, girlfriends and illegitimate children will attest.”

We don’t know all the issues or who made the bad calls, but we’re talking $26 million worth of bad calls. At some point, you have to grow up and hold yourself accountable.

If not you’ll end up on the same level as a lot of other dogs. Broke, pushing 30 and out of work.

Now Vince needs a job. Maybe they’ll build a drive-through at the Austin steakhouse.

Customers could see what Young learned too late.

Nobody is invincible. [\QUOTE]

 
Young to keep job at Texas after drunken driving arrest

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The University of Texas said Tuesday that former NFL and Longhorns quarterback Vince Young will keep his job after his drunken driving arrest.

Young was arrested late Sunday and police said his speech was mumbled and slurred. He later issued an apology on his Facebook account.

Young, 32, led Texas to the national championship in the 2005 season and played six seasons in the NFL. He was hired by Texas in 2014 to promote diversity and community engagement. He is paid about $100,000 per year.

Texas spokesman Gary Susswein said Young "will continue to be an employee" of the school, which is working with him to address the issues related to his arrest.
 
Back
Top