According to the report I heard, he failed the field sobriety test and also had a blood alcohol content "well above the legal limit".
It doesn't sound good.
If he failed the sobriety test, then he's in trouble. This probably means he was tanked. You can pass a sobriety test after a few beers or with a good buzz, but if you're tanked, you aren't passing one of those and you need to be tanked to fail one of them. All you do is walk a straight line heel to toe and stand up on one foot and count. Was it a dumb idea for him? Probably, but to be honest, I'm more worried about how he plays on the court. I could really care less about a player's personal life, unless it's affecting his play.
Just to clarify the above statement a bit: it's pretty easy to fail a roadside sobriety test depending on the disposition of the attending officer and what time of day it is. I was pulled over a 2 a.m., hadn't been drinking, failed the sobriety test (because the cop was being a punk--no surprise there), and then 25 minutes later passed the breathalizer with flying colors. So, it can happen.
Apparently, at least if the reports are true, Gabe later failed the breathalizer test back at the station. So, his goose is probably cooked as far as being guilty...even though everyone's innocent before being proved guilty.
One more thing: we have a pretty good consensus here on the board that drunk driving or "buzzed" driving is bad. Pretty hard to argue that it isn't. You never want to fool around behind the wheel, because you put everybody else at risk. That said, I think some are over-reacting to just
how bad drunk driving is and, consequently, are jumping to some pretty drastic, incorrect conclusions...people making comments like it shows he has bad character, or that he should rot in jail, or that lots of people never make mistakes like this, or that I drank all the time in college but never drove drunk, etc... Really, you do need to get down from the high horse a little.
Let me give you an analogy here to make my point: the degree to which an intoxicated person's reaction time is slowed down by alcohol is EQUIVALENT to the degree to which a non-intoxicated person's reaction time is slowed down....when they're talking on a cell phone (hand-held or wireless). So, everybody out there who's ever talked on a cell phone while driving has put his or her fellow drivers at as much risk as Gabe did while allegedly driving drunk. So, it terms of potential harm caused, I think we all should take a step down from our high horses and stop making these black-and-white declarations of good and evil and realize that life is made up of infinite shades of grey. Gabe made a mistake. And so has everyone at Celticsblog. Get over it.