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Texas Senator Schwertner Boozin’ and Drivin’ Leads to DWI Arrest in the Capitol

A Texas senator from Georgetown was arrested by Austin Police. Charles Jeffrey Schwertner, 52, was booked into Jail just after 2 a.m. Tuesday.

Why are We Not Shocked….Buckle Up When You See a Senator or Judge Drivin’, they are Probably doin’ so with an Open Container and Drunk

JUL 19, 2023 | REPUBLISHED BY LIT: JUL 20, 2023

Austin police arrest Texas senator on DWI charge, records show

charless
FEB 7, 2023 | REPUBLISHED BY LIT: FEB 7, 2023
Jun 16, 2023

Last update/visit to this article by LIT

AUSTIN — A Texas senator from Georgetown was arrested by the Austin Police Department and charged with driving while intoxicated early Tuesday morning.

Online jail records show Charles Jeffrey Schwertner, 52, was booked into the Travis County Jail just after 2 a.m. Tuesday.

According to APD, officers conducted a traffic stop at about 12:46 a.m. at the intersection of Avenue B and West 45th Street. That’s near The Triangle in central Austin. During the interaction, officers arrested Schwertner, police said.

Schwertner’s Texas Senate bio said he has represented the Texas Senate District 5 since 2013. That district covers a 10-county region including Brazos, Freestone, Grimes, Leon, Limestone, Madison, Milam, Robertson, Walker and Williamson counties.

Schwertner was set to chair the Business and Commerce committee on grid reform at the capitol on Tuesday.

KXAN has reached out to his team for comment. We will update this story when we receive a response. He does not have an attorney listed online at this time.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

Body camera footage shows February drunk-driving arrest of Sen. Charles Schwertner

Newly released body camera footage shows state Sen. Charles Schwertner’s February arrest for suspicion of drunk driving. Travis County prosecutors dropped the charge in July.

SEP 30, 2023 | REPUBLISHED BY LIT: OCT 2, 2023

Newly released body camera footage shows state Sen. Charles Schwertner’s February arrest for suspicion of drunk driving after refusing to take a breathalyzer test. Travis County prosecutors dropped the charge in July, saying there was not enough evidence to secure a conviction.

The video was released to The Texas Tribune on Friday in response to a public records request. It shows Schwertner, a Georgetown Republican, being pulled over in the early morning hours of Feb. 7 in Austin. The officer tells Schwertner he was driving between two lanes, and Schwertner apologizes, saying he and his passenger were “changing channels and stuff.”

State Rep. Claudia Ordaz, D-El Paso, can be seen in the front passenger seat with Schwertner as he is being pulled over. In a statement, she said, “I had no involvement in this matter other than being a passenger at the time of this incident and was fully cooperative with authorities at all times. I regret this incident occurred, and in the future, I will use more caution to prevent this type of unfortunate circumstance.”

The video goes on to show Schwertner repeating he had not been drinking, performing field sobriety tests and being handcuffed. He was released from the Travis County jail later that day, telling reporters he was “deeply apologetic” and “made a mistake.”

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Schwertner’s lawyer, Perry Minton, declined to answer questions about the video and instead provided a brief statement.

“This is the video the Travis County Attorney’s Office viewed when it rejected any charges against Senator Schwertner months ago,” Minton said. “It’s time to move on to newsworthy stories.”

The Tribune provided the video to both Schwertner’s and Ordaz’s offices shortly after it was released on Friday evening. Minton provided his statement Saturday morning, while Ordaz did not respond with a comment until just 1 minute before this story’s publication.

In the video, Schwertner tells the officer he was picking up Ordaz at the airport and they had gone out to dinner at Whataburger. Ordaz tells the officer they are parked at her place, and Schwertner confirms it is where she lives.

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The officer asks if they have been drinking and both say no. The officer asks Schwertner to come out of the car, and once he does, the officer tells Schwertner he notices a “strong smell of alcohol” on his breath. The officer asks again if Schwertner had anything to drink, and Schwertner says no.

A little while later, the officer continues to ask Schwertner whether he has been drinking, at one point asking him to rate how drunk he is on a scale of zero to 10. Part of the audio of the exchange is missing, but Schwertner’s response is audible.

“I’m sober,” Schwertner says. “Zero.”

The officer proceeds to conduct field sobriety tests on Schwertner, during which his wife apparently arrives at the scene.

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“My wife just showed up,” Schwertner says, explaining he was distracted while balancing on one foot.

They try to restart the exercise, but Schwertner is still distracted.

“Belinda. Belinda,” Schwertner says. “She’s an attorney.”

While a voice can be heard offscreen, the words are inaudible. It is unclear who exactly Schwertner was referring to as an attorney. Neither Belinda Schwertner nor Ordaz are listed as attorneys in either of their public profiles.

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The officer and Schwertner resume the exercise, but Schwertner becomes impatient. He asks the officer if the length of time he has been balancing is “sufficient,” and the officer tells him that is not for him to decide.

“Officer, this is getting to be a interrogation,” Schwertner says.

The officer says all he is trying to do is get Schwertner to follow instructions for a “standardized field sobriety test.” Schwertner insists he has done everything the officer has asked him to do and tells the officer he is “acting inappropriately.”

Schwertner ultimately completes the test and he and the officer walk over closer to a police car, where a second officer assures Schwertner he is going through a “standardized thing” and not getting any unique treatment. A third officer presents Schwertner with what he calls a “preliminary breath test,” explains it detects alcohol and asks if he would like to take it. Schwertner says no and is handcuffed and told he is “under arrest for driving while intoxicated.”

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The video goes on for about another half hour, showing Schwertner being placed in a police car, calmly interacting with officers and arriving at the jail.

At one point, Schwertner asks the first officer if he can sit in the front of the police car. The officer says he has to put Schwertner in the back due to policy. Schwertner gets in the back of the car and sighs.

“I’ve done so much for you guys,” Schwertner says.

The officer replies that he appreciates it but he is just doing his job. Schwertner says he understands.

While Schwertner is in the car, the arresting officer is approached by another officer.

“I need to call the watch commander because that’s a senator, a Texas state senator, and they’re in the legislative session right now,” the other officer says before adding in a reassuring tone: “You do everything right. Everybody’s treated the same.”

Schwertner was booked into the Travis County jail at 2:12 a.m. and charged with driving while intoxicated. He received a personal recognizance bond and was released from jail shortly after noon that day.

“I’m deeply sorry, apologetic to my citizens and my family,” Schwertner told reporters as he left the jail. “I made a mistake.”

The officer who arrested Schwertner wrote in an affidavit for probable cause that in addition to the smell of alcohol on his breath, Schwertner had “bloodshot, glassy, watery eyes, was confused, and had slurred speech patterns.” The officer also described Schwertner’s demeanor as “polite, sleepy, cooperative.”

Travis County Attorney Delilah Garza announced July 18 that there was not enough evidence to continue with the case. She also said Schwertner “voluntarily submitted to alcohol counseling and alcohol monitoring with no violations.” Minton, Schwertner’s lawyer, said it was the “right decision based strictly on the evidence.”

After Schwertner’s arrest, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said there was “zero excuse” for drunk driving, especially “by a member of the legislature whose conduct should be held to a higher standard.” Patrick added he would withhold further comment until the “final outcome of this issue in court.” Patrick has since not commented on the situation.

Schwertner chairs the Senate Business and Commerce Committee and has served in the upper chamber since 2013. He represents Senate District 5, a Republican-friendly district that covers the north Austin suburbs and spreads east to include College Station.

Schwertner, 53, previously had a personal controversy in 2018, when he was accused of sending sexually explicit photos of his genitals to a graduate student at the University of Texas. He denied the allegations, saying that someone else sent the messages using his LinkedIn account and another privacy phone messaging app that belongs to him.

A university investigation did not clear Schwertner of wrongdoing but said it could not prove Schwertner sent the texts. Investigators said Schwertner was uncooperative.

After the allegation, Schwertner voluntarily gave up his chairmanship of the Senate’s Health and Human Services Committee.

Married father-of-three Republican Texas Senator is accused of sending photos of his genitals to grad student and telling her ‘I just really want to f**k you’

SEP 26, 2023 | REPUBLISHED BY LIT: OCT 2, 2023

Married father-of-three Republican Texas Senator is accused of sending photos of his genitals to grad student and telling her ‘I just really want to f**k you’

Senator Charles Schwertner, 48, was accused of sending an image of his genitals that was taken in the shower

The married father-of-three allegedly wrote ‘I just really want to f**k you’ to an unnamed woman he met at a University of Texas event this summer

Schwertner’s accuser says the pair began talking professionally on LinkedIn but moved the conversation to text massages
The Texas Republican reportedly did not respond when the graduate told him his behavior was inappropriate

He’s the third Texas Senate member accused of behaving inappropriately with women since Senator Borris Miles and former Senator Carlos Uresti in December

A university spokesperson says they are ‘committed to fostering a safe campus environment and to providing needed support and resources to victims’

Senator Charles Schwertner has been accused of sending sexually explicit messages to a postgraduate student from the University of Texas, something the Georgetown Republican ‘categorically denied’ Tuesday.

According to the American-Statesman, a complaint from a woman he met at an event on campus this summer states the married father-of-three shared an image of his genitals that was taken in the shower and used other inappropriate language.

The report states Schwertner, 48, was giving career advice via LinkedIn to the woman, whose identity has been protected in line with student privacy laws, however their conversation soon moved to text messages and took a turn.
Senator Charles Schwertner, 48, was accused of sending an image of his genitals that was taken in the shower

Senator Charles Schwertner, 48, was accused of sending an image of his genitals that was taken in the shower

The married father-of-three allegedly wrote ‘I just really want to f**k you’ to an unnamed woman he met at a University of Texas event this summer

The married father-of-three (pictured center) allegedly wrote ‘I just really want to f**k you’ to an unnamed woman he met at a University of Texas event this summer.

At one point the man who describes himself as a ‘family man and life-long conservative’ on his website, allegedly wrote ‘I just really want to f**k you’.

Three senior officials from the university also told the American-Statesman that although they have not seen the photograph in question, it does not include the face of the person featured.

Schwertner – who has a has a bachelor’s degree in pharmacy from the school as well as a medical degree from the university’s Galveston branch – is said to have not replied when the woman told him he had acted inappropriately.

‘The Senator categorically denies any knowledge of the accusations leveled against him and only became aware of this allegation when contacted by the media late this afternoon,’ Schwertner’s campaign spokesperson, Tom Holloway, said in a statement.

‘The Senator is eager to cooperate with the University of Texas and hopes to make clear he played no part in the behavior described.’

The Senator was giving career advice via LinkedIn to the woman whose identity has been protected in line with student privacy laws, however their conversation soon moved to textsA spokesperson for University of Texas (Galveston campus pictured) said they take allegations of wrongdoing seriously and encourage those on campus to report matters urgently.

In December 2017 Texas Senate members Senator Borris Miles, a Houston Democrat, and former Senator Carlos Uresti, a San Antonio Democrat, were accused of behaving inappropriately with women related to their work in the Capitol.

Both men denied the allegations and Uresti later resigned due to unrelated matters including fraud.

Uresti was found guilty of 11 felonies and sentenced to 12 years in prison in June this year but remains out on bond as he prepares for another federal trial beginning October 22.

Schwertner is one of 23 male members of the Senate out of 31 people.

In December 2017 former Senator Carlos Uresti ( and Senator Borris Miles  were accused of behaving inappropriately with women

Uresti later resigned due to unrelated matters including fraud.

He was found guilty of 11 felonies and sentenced to 12 years in prison in June this year.

He chairs the Health and Human Services Committee and forms part of the finance, state affairs and business and commerce committees.

The Senator is also involved with Higher Education Formula Funding on the Joint Interim Committee.

He was elected to the House in 2010 and moved up to the Senate when Republican Senator Steve Ogden retired 2013.

Schwertner was re-elected in 2014 after competition from the Democratic Party’s Meg Walsh.

Gary Susswein, a spokesperson for the university said they take allegations of wrongdoing seriously and encourage those on campus to report matters urgently.

He added in a statement which said they aim to investigate complaints ‘thoroughly and quickly’: ‘UT is strongly committed to fostering a safe campus environment and to providing needed support and resources to victims.’

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Texas Senator Schwertner Boozin’ and Drivin’ Leads to DWI Arrest in the Capitol
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