Suspected DUI Driver Crashes Into Neighbor’s House

By Geo Duarte

Neighbor under the influence, backs up with heavy foot on the pedal then crashing, and truck becomes stuck on staircase and retaining wall, risking ultimate injury on new neighbors.

A neighbor in the upper San Roque Area, suspected DUI, crashed his truck into a neighboring residential structure in the hills above Foothill Rd.

The driver is a man in his 70s who apparently has a history of being difficult with his neighbors. The driver was arrested for drunk driving after blowing a .265 blood alcohol level and was taken to county jail. 

CHP was requested to respond and was assigned the main reporting agency as the location is within the unincorporated area of the county.

What is strange is how the angle of the truck’s trajectory reached his neighbor’s residential structue. A five inch dent upon the exterior was initially visible on the carport. The truck was able to be quickly removed by towrucks due to the possibility of further damage to the garage’s structure. It was sort of floating above a retaining wall and some rocks at the bottom of a stairway next to the mailbox of the residence.

The victim of the incident reported that the offending neighbor, could not even open the door to the truck. His music was blaring, he appeared super confused. And, the cause was that of thus, he floored it, while the vehicles transmission was possibly still in reverse.

Geo Duarte

Written by Geo Duarte

Geo Duarte is a volunteer scanner reporter for edhat.com. More reports can be viewed on Geo's Instagram page @Xtek_Overload

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28 Comments

  1. A man in his 70s with a BAC of .265… That is a man with a long serious drinking history that is in desperate need of help/rehab. Fortunately no one was hurt, and hopefully this man has people around him who cares enough to get him the help he needs. If I knew who he was I’d be the first in line to help.

  2. The text on the I.G. page is more accurate. The edhat version was somewhat redacted. The video helps give a perspective of the gravity. @Xtek_Overload. They had to asses how to best not damage the property before removing the truck. A crane and a second tow truck were necessary.

  3. Tow companies everywhere rich and poor have recovery equipment that can handle this with ease. The divide would be rural vs. urban on how it is handled. If I had to remove it without specialized recovery equipment in a very rural area, I’d just get two tractors, one in front, one in back and lift slowly simultaneously with the tractor attached to the back pivoting it away from the garage and then up. Might have to re-rig straps a couple times (one at a time of course)
    I am also confident a person who knows what they are doing could get that out of there with a 12,000lbs material handler (telescoping forklift) some heavy straps by themself (805 Towing has one) point is that is not a hard lift for people who are used to moving heavy things carefully

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