Rep. Enrique Sanchez, a Providence Democrat, is shown during a vehicle stop in Cranston.
Rep. Enrique Sanchez, a Providence Democrat, is shown during a vehicle stop in Cranston.
Still from Cranston police body camera courtesy of Cranston Police Department

State Rep Pleads Guilty to Refusing Breathalyzer During February DUI Arrest

Share
Rep. Enrique Sanchez, a Providence Democrat, is shown during a vehicle stop in Cranston.
Rep. Enrique Sanchez, a Providence Democrat, is shown during a vehicle stop in Cranston.
Still from Cranston police body camera courtesy of Cranston Police Department
State Rep Pleads Guilty to Refusing Breathalyzer During February DUI Arrest
Copy

A state lawmaker accused of driving while intoxicated in Cranston in February can keep his license but must use a breath alcohol ignition device for six months after pleading guilty to a traffic court citation.

State Rep. Enrique Sanchez, a Providence Democrat, pleaded guilty Friday before the Rhode Island Traffic Tribunal to refusing to take a breathalyzer test in exchange for prosecutors dropping a citation for failing to obey traffic control devices.

He had pleaded not guilty to the citations during his initial appearance Feb. 19.

Sanchez, 28, must complete 10 hours of community service, undergo alcohol treatment, and use a breathalyzer-activated ignition device for six months, according to an order from Traffic Tribunal Magistrate Mark Welch.

Welch had also ordered Sanchez’s license suspended 30 days, but the ruling was retroactive to Feb. 19 — meaning it’s since been reinstated.

Sanchez still faces a misdemeanor DUI charge in Providence County Superior Court, where a pre-trial conference is scheduled for Friday, April 4.

The second-term lawmaker deferred inquiries Monday to his attorney, former Rhode Island House Speaker John Harwood, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi has reserved comment on Sanchez’s Traffic Tribunal plea as the criminal case continues. Sanchez was arrested by Cranston Police on Feb. 3 after an officer spotted him behind the wheel of a 2017 Nissan Altima stopped at a green light on Reservoir Avenue at 3 a.m. The arresting officer claimed Sanchez was disoriented and smelled of alcohol, which Sanchez has denied.

This story was originally published by the Rhode Island Current.

From cancer labs to coastal climate tools, Rhode Island researchers join scientists nationwide in warning that federal funding cuts could stall lifesaving work
T.F. Green received a score of 84.9 in the annual Travel + Leisure magazine competition based on reader surveys evaluating airport amenities
The hospital allowed an unlicensed medical assistant to do a procedure prohibited under state regulations
Famiglietti, a personal injury lawyer who serves on North Providence’s town council, won more than 70% of the district’s votes in a four-way race
A rare legal clash between the Justice Department and the federal judiciary echoes to Rhode Island, where a 1990s-era lawsuit filed by then–U.S. Attorney Sheldon Whitehouse offers precedent and underscores the escalating tensions between executive power and judicial independence
The new state law also mandates RAs to be trained to administer the life-saving opioid reversal medication