La-Z-Boy from drunk driving case to be auctioned

Thu Oct 29, 8:18 PM EDT
Loading... Share No Thanks

DULUTH, Minn. — A motorized La-Z-Boy used by a man who pleaded guilty to driving it drunk is going up for auction. But police said interested bidders need to keep it off the streets. The chair, powered by a lawnmower engine, comes equipped with a stereo, cup holders and lights.

Police in Proctor, in northern Minnesota, are putting the seized chair up for auction on eBay on Thursday. The proceeds will go to the police, state and the prosecuting attorney.

But Chief Walter Wobig cautions that the chair isn't "street legal," so any buyer should stick to the living room — or at most a parade.

The former owner, Dennis LeRoy Anderson, pleaded guilty this month to operating the chair while intoxicated. His family is also auctioning on eBay an autographed photo of him riding the La-Z-Boy to help with his fees.

___

Information from: Duluth News Tribune, http://www.duluthsuperior.com

Loading... Share No Thanks

Most Popular News

  • A.R. Rahman, Jennifer Hudson headline state dinner

    It's an all-star lineup for Tuesday's first state dinner of the Obama White House: Oscar-winners Jennifer Hudson and A.R. Rahman headline the entertainment list.

  • Jet-winged adventurer ditches in Atlantic, unhurt
    Jet-winged adventurer ditches in Atlantic, unhurt

    A Swiss adventurer trying to soar from Morocco to Spain on jet-powered wings ditched safely into the Atlantic on Wednesday after hitting turbulence and clouds so thick he could not tell if he was flying up or down.

  • Authorities: Hanged Ky. census worker killed self
    Authorities: Hanged Ky. census worker killed self

    When an eastern Kentucky census worker was found naked, bound with duct tape and hanging from a tree with "fed" scrawled on his chest, suspicion fell on the hardscrabble Appalachian area where bad news seems like a way of life.

  • Vicki Kennedy describes husband's cancer battle
    Vicki Kennedy describes husband's cancer battle

    The widow of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy told Oprah Winfrey in an interview broadcast Wednesday that even as her husband knew he was dying of brain cancer he had been "in training" to make sure he had enough strength to attend President Barack Obama's inauguration.

Loading...