Drunk driver arrested in Riverside had warrants in 3 states

SHARE Drunk driver arrested in Riverside had warrants in 3 states
police_lights91_300x18816.jpg

Sun-Times file photo

A 41-year-old woman from Minnesota was arrested for drunk driving Monday in west suburban Riverside, where officers discovered she had active warrants from three other states.

Tasha Lynn Schleicher, of New Hope, Minnesota, was charged with drunk driving, driving with a revoked license, driving without insurance and transporting open alcohol, Riverside police said.

Tasha Lynn Schleicher | Riverside police

Tasha Lynn Schleicher | Riverside police

About 9:30 p.m., Schleicher was found passed out behind the wheel of her car at the Amstar gas station at 3346 S. Harlem Ave., police said. Officers arrived and found her highly intoxicated, sitting beside an open bottle of liquor. After she refused to take a sobriety test, officers arrested her.

Schleicher had three outstanding warrants from other states, police said. She had a warrant in Nebraska for violation of a court order, and separate warrants in Idaho and Oregon for failing to appear for drunk driving charges.

Riverside police said Schleicher could not explain why she was in Illinois. She insisted she was with her 11 children, but police confirmed with Minnesota Child Protective Services that her children had been taken away from her after a prior DUI arrest in October last year.

Schleicher’s car was seized by officers under Illinois law for DUI seizures, police said. Riverside Police Chief Tom Weitzel called Cook County States Attorney’s Office to relay that she should be held in custody, and that she needs immediate social service and medical intervention for severe alcohol abuse.

Schleicher has 11 prior arrests in multiple states for driving under the influence, police said.

The Latest
The faux flower installations have popped up at restaurants and other businesses in Lake View, Lincoln Park, the West Loop and beyond, mirroring a global trend.
Mayor Brandon Johnson’s latest initiatives don’t address concerns raised in a lawsuit against the city and provide no reassurance the city will get accessible housing right going forward.
Prosecuting Assange would pose a grave threat to freedom of the press by treating common journalistic practices as crimes.
Significantly increasing the percentage of electric vehicles on the roads is an important way to help reduce climate change. But there are a number of roadblocks.
Expanding insurance coverage of high-priced injectable weight-loss drugs for state workers will cost taxpayers $210 million in the first year of the initiative. But at least one economist says that estimate is way off and is expected to be millions more.