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APPETITE FOR DISCUSSION
Welcome to Appetite for Discussion -- a Guns N' Roses fan forum!

Please feel free to look around the forum as a guest, I hope you will find something of interest. If you want to join the discussions or contribute in other ways then you need to become a member. We especially welcome anyone who wants to share documents for our archive or would be interested in translating or transcribing articles and interviews.

Registering is free and easy.

Cheers!
SoulMonster

1995.07.18 - Los Angeles Times - Drunk-Driving Case Puts Rocker on Trial (Dizzy)

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1995.07.18 - Los Angeles Times - Drunk-Driving Case Puts Rocker on Trial (Dizzy) Empty 1995.07.18 - Los Angeles Times - Drunk-Driving Case Puts Rocker on Trial (Dizzy)

Post by Blackstar Thu Aug 22, 2019 10:04 am

1995.07.18 - Los Angeles Times - Drunk-Driving Case Puts Rocker on Trial (Dizzy) 1995_035
1995.07.18 - Los Angeles Times - Drunk-Driving Case Puts Rocker on Trial (Dizzy) 1995_036

Drunk-Driving Case Puts Rocker on Trial

By PAUL ELIAS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

Does the band Guns N’ Roses play rock ‘n’ roll or heavy metal?

“Heavy metal has a negative connotation,” said defense attorney Robert Ernenwein. “I prefer rock ‘n’ roll.”

A judge agreed, and 35 Ventura County residents in the Ventura Municipal Court jury pool were told Monday that Darren (Dizzy) Reed plays rock ‘n’ roll. With that legal question settled, a jury of five women and seven men began hearing Ventura County’s own celebrity criminal trial.

Reed, 32, of Thousand Oaks is a keyboard player for the popular Guns N’ Roses rock group, led by Axl Rose. Reed was arrested Feb. 9 on the Moorpark Freeway near the Ventura Freeway off-ramp.

The charge: drunk driving. His plea: not guilty. His defense: His friend was driving and pulled over to vomit when the California Highway Patrol happened on the scene.

The prosecution contends otherwise. The trial to settle the matter is expected to last the week.

A bevy of Hall of Justice workers and a few fans shuttled in and out of the courtroom Monday afternoon, staying long enough to catch a glimpse of Reed and a snippet of testimony.

“I have a few lyrics I would like to give him,” said Steven LaFreniere of Camarillo, who called himself a “big fan” of the rock band. The 25-year-old LaFreniere was in the courtroom next door with a friend when he learned of the trial.

“This is sort of like Ventura County’s own O.J. trial,” he said.

Dressed in black jeans and cowboy boots, Reed’s wire-rimmed glasses were the only thing that belied his rock ‘n’ roll presence. A gold earring dangled from his right earlobe, and three silver bracelets dangled from his right wrist.

His long brown hair reached the middle of his back, and his long-sleeved silk shirt was rolled up above the elbows, betraying a large tattoo on his right bicep that read “The wild shall the wild remain.”

And by all accounts, the early morning hours of Feb. 8 made for a wild night for Reed, who owns a house on Country Club Road.

Both sides agree that it began with a band practice and drinking session at a North Hollywood studio that lasted past midnight. Reed and roommate Sean Riggs--a Guns N’ Roses studio drummer--left the practice and continued drinking at the Yucatan Cantina on Thousand Oaks Boulevard in Westlake Village.

When Reed was arrested about 4 a.m., he registered a 0.25 blood-alcohol level, more than three times the legal limit. Nobody disputes Reed was drunk that morning.

“If an officer asked him if he was Elvis Presley, he would have said yes,” Ernenwein told the jury during his opening statement. “That’s how intoxicated he was.”

Deputy Dist. Atty. Mike Flory agreed that Reed was not “the most coherent individual at a [blood-alcohol level of] 0.25.” But Flory told the jury Reed was behind the wheel that morning.

With that, Flory called CHP Officer Philip Meschke to the stand. Meschke arrested Reed.

Meschke said he watched Reed’s blue Chevrolet Blazer move slowly about 18 feet along the emergency lane before stopping. Before Meschke and his partner were able to get to the Blazer, Meschke said he saw Reed get out by the driver’s door and walk to the rear of the vehicle.

He said Reed returned to the driver’s seat by the time Meschke got to the Blazer. "[Reed] said he was drinking beer,” Meschke said. “He said he had about three or four.”

Ernenwein attempted to poke holes in Meschke’s testimony, which often appeared contradictory.

The defense attorney pointed out that Meschke testified at an earlier proceeding that he watched the Blazer move only six feet before stopping. Ernenwein also pointed out that Meschke omitted talking to John Taylor the morning of the arrest.

Taylor is the bar manager of the Yucatan Cantina and Ernenwein said he will testify that Riggs was driving when the duo left the bar. Taylor was driving along the Moorpark Freeway when he came upon Reed’s Blazer and stopped to offer assistance, the attorney said.

Meschke’s testimony was scheduled to continue this morning.
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1995.07.18 - Los Angeles Times - Drunk-Driving Case Puts Rocker on Trial (Dizzy) Empty Re: 1995.07.18 - Los Angeles Times - Drunk-Driving Case Puts Rocker on Trial (Dizzy)

Post by Blackstar Thu Aug 22, 2019 10:07 am

Los Angeles Times, July 21, 1995:

1995.07.18 - Los Angeles Times - Drunk-Driving Case Puts Rocker on Trial (Dizzy) 1995_037

Band Member Is Found Guilty of Drunk Driving

Courts: Guns N' Roses keyboardist Darren Reed is sentenced to five days of community service and fined $1,515. Jury foreman calls it ‘a tough case.’

By PAUL ELIAS
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

Darren (Dizzy) Reed did not show up Thursday to hear a Ventura County Municipal Court jury decide he was guilty of drunk driving.

His lawyer said the Thousand Oaks resident was too busy rehearsing with his band, Guns N’ Roses, to attend the court proceedings. California law allows attorneys to stand in for their clients during misdemeanor verdict readings.

The 32-year-old keyboard player for the popular rock band had attracted throngs of fans and curious county workers during the three-day trial.

Two California Highway Patrol officers testified that they saw Reed's Chevy Blazer moving slowly in the emergency lane of California 23 in Thousand Oaks about 4 a.m. Feb. 9. The truck stopped in the lane, the officers testified, and Reed got out of the driver's seat.

Shortly after he was arrested, Reed registered a 0.25% blood alcohol level, more than three times the legal limit.

Reed never denied he was drunk. But he maintained that his roommate was driving as they headed back to their home on Country Club Road in Thousand Oaks. Jurors deliberated for more than six hours over two days before deciding what to believe.

“It was a tough case,'' jury foreman Darrel Banks said. The testimony of the two young CHP officers was often contradictory, and some of their reports were incomplete.

“We chalked it up to their inexperience," fellow juror Helen Craig said.

Municipal Court Judge Burt Henson sentenced Reed to five days of community service and fined him $1,515. Reed also must attend alcohol education classes. Most drunk drivers serve their community service by picking up trash along the county's highways, Deputy Dist. Atty. Mike Flory said.

During the trial, Reed testified that he could not remember most of the events the night he was arrested because he was so drunk.

Reed said he drank whiskey and beer during band practice in North Hollywood before driving to the Yucatan Cantina in Westlake, where he drank more beer and a liqueur.

Prosecutors alleged that Reed continued to drink after the bar closed at 2 a.m., but bar manager John Taylor refused to answer a prosecutor's questions about after-hours drinking. It is illegal for bars to serve alcohol after 2 a.m.

The jury decided that Reed was driving and that he pulled over to let his friend vomit.
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