BALTIMORE (AP) -- Olympic gold
medal swimmer Michael Phelps avoided jail time on Friday when a judge
placed him on probation for pleading guilty to a drunken driving charge
for the second time in 10 years. The punishment came with a warning.
''You don't
need a lecture from the court,'' Baltimore District Judge Nathan
Braverman told Phelps. ''If you haven't gotten the message by now, or
forget the message, the only option is jail.''
Probation
allows the most decorated Olympian ever to focus on training for the
2016 Games in Rio De Janeiro, which would be his fifth. The 29-year-old
came out of a year's retirement with his sights set on Rio, and the plea
is not expected to have any ill effect on those plans.
The
swimmer was contrite in court, with his attorney detailing his pursuit
of sobriety since his arrest, including 45 days of inpatient treatment
in Arizona. A letter from his doctor there was glowing, saying he was
forthright and cooperative.
Phelps'
attorney, Steve Allen, told the judge that Phelps had already made
tremendous progress, and is continuing with therapy in Maryland and has
enrolled in Alcoholics Anonymous.
''Mr.
Phelps is a wonderful person,'' Allen said. ''He's a gifted athlete,
but he's also a person who gives back to the community. Mr. Phelps gets
it: he gets what he did, he gets that he has a problem. He's had nothing
but remorse for his mistake.''
Documents show Phelps was
stopped on Sept. 30 for speeding and crossing the double yellow line
while driving in the Fort McHenry Tunnel. Police say Phelps registered a
.14 percent on a blood-alcohol test. The legal limit is .08 percent in
Maryland.
An officer said he pulled Phelps over for going 84 mph in a 45 mph zone.
The judge sentenced Phelps to a year in prison, but the sentence is suspended in favor of 18 months on probation.
The
18-time gold medalist will not be allowed to drink any alcohol while on
probation. Phelps' license was suspended for 90 days after he was
arrested, though Allen said that could be extended as a result of the
guilty plea.
Phelps, who was
surrounded by his mother, sisters and friends, including former
Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis, addressed the judge and
acknowledged his poor judgment.
''I now have the tools to move
past this. What I did was wrong, and I made a bad mistake. I'm looking
forward to having a much brighter future than I had in the past,''
Phelps said.
After pleading
guilty to his first drunken driving charge in 2004, Phelps was sentenced
to probation and required to talk to high school students about alcohol
awareness. Phelps pleaded guilty to the charges, but as a young
first-time offender he avoided conviction.
''I
recognize the seriousness of this mistake,'' he said at the time.
''I've learned from this mistake and will continue learning from this
mistake for the rest of my life.''
Another
embarrassment for Phelps came in 2009, when a British tabloid newspaper
published a photo of him using a marijuana pipe at a party in South
Carolina. Afterward, Phelps was suspended from USA swimming for three
months and one of his major sponsors, Kellogg Co., dropped him.
Phelps
has returned to training and a six-month suspension imposed by USA
Swimming ends on March 6. That will allow him to swim the final three
events on the U.S. Grand Prix schedule. Phelps might also seek to add
some international meets to beef up his 2015 schedule, since he is also
banned from swimming in next summer's world championships in Russia.
''We're looking at a lot of
different options for competition,'' his coach, Bob Bowman, told The
Associated Press in a recent interview. ''We'll look at things in March
and really go from there.''
Phelps
retired after the 2012 London Olympics but changed his mind a year
later. Bowman said the swimmer was in much better shape, even after his
DUI arrest and taking time off, than he was during his initial return to
the pool.
Phelps won three
golds and two silvers at one of the biggest meets of the 2014, the Pan
Pacific Championships in August. He was named the male athlete of the
year by USA Swimming.
As he
walked down the steps of the Baltimore courthouse, Phelps said the past
three months have been among the most difficult of his life.
''I'm
finding out a lot about myself and for this day, I'm happy to be moving
forward,'' Phelps said. ''I'll continue to grow from this and continue
on my path or recovery.''
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire