An off-duty Westchester County police officer charged with drunken driving in a Dec. 27 accident in Scarsdale that left a village officer injured pleaded not guilty Wednesday and turned over his driver's license to the court.
Officer Joseph Kraus did not speak during his brief arraignment before Village Justice Arlene Katz in Scarsdale. The plea was entered by his Tuckahoe-based attorney, Thomas Vallely.
Neither would comment afterward. Kraus was accompanied to court by several plainclothes county police officers, in an apparent show of support.
Kraus was arrested about 2 a.m., almost a half-hour after, Scarsdale police said, he drove past a red light in his pickup truck, then hit a village police car at East Parkway and Popham Road, injuring Scarsdale Officer Jessica Knatz. She suffered facial and back injuries and had to be cut from the cruiser by emergency responders.
Kraus told investigating officers he'd had "two or three beers" earlier in the evening. Kraus, 35, of Mount Vernon refused to submit to a chemical test to measure his blood-alcohol level. He was charged with driving while intoxicated, a misdemeanor, and issued a traffic ticket in connection with the red light.
According to police records, he was released without bail from Scarsdale police custody at 5:45 a.m.
In court, Kraus was ordered to turn over his driver's license, pending a state Department of Motor Vehicles hearing scheduled for Wednesday.
DWI suspects who refuse to submit to a chemical test can have their licenses revoked for a year.
Katz adjourned the case until Feb. 3.
Kraus, a county police officer since 2005, remains free without bail and has been suspended with pay pending a county police investigation .
He is one of four off-duty law enforcement officers from Westchester arrested in drunken-driving accidents in recent weeks.
Dobbs Ferry Officer Michael Huffman was charged with DWI and two traffic violations after a Dec. 11 rollover in Tarrytown. He recently returned to modified duty and is due in Tarrytown Village Court on Wednesday. He lives in Dobbs Ferry.
County Correction Officer Patricia Yancy-Johnson remains at work after she was charged with DWI by Greenburgh police after being accused of rear-ending an ambulance. The Yonkers resident is due in Town Court on Feb. 5.
White Plains Police Officer Joe Zepeda is to be arraigned on a DWI charge in City Court on Monday. He was arrested Dec. 31 by state police. He was accused of hitting a tractor-trailer on Interstate 287.
Zepeda, a Mahopac resident, has been suspended without pay pending an internal investigation.
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