According to the state police in Tolland, Olander was pulled over on Rte. 195 on Saturday at 10:49 p.m. He failed a field sobriety test and was charged with operating under the influence, operating an unregistered motor vehicle and operation of a motor vehicle in violation of license classification.
The latter charge, according to a source, stems from Olander not having a driver's license at all. Not a suspended license or a misplaced license -- no license at all. Olander was driving a friend's car.
A court date will likely be held in a couple of weeks.
It’s the second time in the span of six months that
Olander has run into trouble. The Mansfield product was arrested while on
spring break last March in Panama City, Fla. on trespassing charges. The charges
were eventually dropped and he was accepted into a diversionary program, but he
was stripped of his captaincy by coach Kevin Ollie and barred from the locker
room and team activities for a month, Olander told the Register last month.
“Basically, all the UConn people were staying in two
hotels,” he said of the March 21 incident. “You needed a wrist band to get in
the hotel. My girlfriend was in the hotel, I wanted to get up there with her
and it was past the hour, so they wouldn’t let me up.”
Olander said Ollie had told him he could win back his
captaincy at some point. Safe to say, that's not going to happen now.
Olander is the second UConn player to be suspended
indefinitely from the team in the past seven months. Enosch Wolf was suspended
last February after a domestic incident with his girlfriend. He missed the
remainder of the season, and his suspension was eventually lifted in June.
However, he would have had to come back as a non-scholarship player, and Wolf
elected to play professionally in Germany instead.
*** Anyway, I was on my way to Storrs at the time when UConn first sent out its email about Olander's suspension. My plan had been to watch some players and talk to them about the upcoming season (practices start in a little over two weeks!), but obviously got side-tracked.
To hold you over, here's some video of the team in pick-up games. Here, Kentan Facey takes the ball outside and doesn't pass to Amida Brimah, despite his pleas. Terrence Samuel winds up getting the ball and taking it to the hole, missing the layup. Brimah grabs the offensive board but is rejected by Phil Nolan:
And here, Lasan Kromah hits a lane fallaway jumper:
*** Anyway, I was on my way to Storrs at the time when UConn first sent out its email about Olander's suspension. My plan had been to watch some players and talk to them about the upcoming season (practices start in a little over two weeks!), but obviously got side-tracked.
To hold you over, here's some video of the team in pick-up games. Here, Kentan Facey takes the ball outside and doesn't pass to Amida Brimah, despite his pleas. Terrence Samuel winds up getting the ball and taking it to the hole, missing the layup. Brimah grabs the offensive board but is rejected by Phil Nolan:
And here, Lasan Kromah hits a lane fallaway jumper:
Generally, DUI Lawyers will not charge you for some legal advice. You have to make sure that you choose the right lawyer so that you can keep track what is going on with your case. I remember, hiring Los Angeles DUI attorney was a daunting task for us when my brother got charged for DUI.
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