Update May 12: Lary Coppola, speaking as a private citizen
at the Port Orchard City Council meeting on Tuesday, took the
opportunity “to address the situation on May 2.” Once again he
apologized to the city and to his family. His statement and a
comment of support from Larry DeBarthe are within the first five
minutes of the city’s
video recording of the meeting. The video is posted on the city’s
website.
7:45 p.m. : I received an e-mail from Lary Coppola, who
believes I misquoted him in the interview with Dori
Monson.
I have revised this post with deletions (struck through) and
additions (italics) to indicate where the mayor believes he was
misquoted.
Port Orchard Mayor Lary Coppola, who was
arrested early Sunday morning on suspicion of drunken driving,
appeared on KIRO radio
Friday afternoon and apologized to his constituents.
Host Dori Monson, who was harshly critical of Coppola earlier
this week, mispronounced his name … saying it as in Francis Ford
etc.* But he gave the mayor props for appearing on the show.
Apparently state education chief Randy Dorn, who
recently found himself in a similar pickle, turned down a
similar invitation from Monson.
Coppola, asked to describe the events that let to his arrest,
said he was driving home from a “charity event” (that would be the
Port Orchard Rotary Crab Feed & Auction Saturday at McCormick Woods
Clubhouse. About 100 yards from his home, Coppola said, he saw
someone “run out of the shadows and jump in a car.” Suspicious,
Coppola followed the car into “a driveway” (near The Rockwell
apartments, Coppola’s home) and called 911. The other driver also
called 911 to complain that Coppola was blocking his vehicle,
according to a police report.
Coppola said that when law enforcement arrived, “They said,
‘Have you been drinking?’ and I said, ‘Well, yeah.'”
Monson asked if, given
the mayor’s .12 blood alcohol level, he should have been
driving a car.
“I should not have,” Coppola said. “There’s no two ways about
it. It was an egregiousgrievous error
in judgment.”
Does he have a problem with alcohol? Monson asked.
“No. I drink rarely and very little when I do,” Coppola
said.
“There was a time in my life I was a pretty heavy drinker in
between marriages,” Coppola said, adding that over the past 20
years he has consumed alcohol “very little.” “I do not drink every
day,” he said.
Monson asked what it’s like to be a public figure in this
situation.
“It’s personally and professionally humiliating beyond belief,”
Coppola said. “This has got to be the worst experience I’ve ever
had.”
“It’s been hard on my family,” Coppola acknowledged, telling
Monson that a pending adoption of his 6-year-year-old grandson,
Bryce, may be in jeopardy as a result of the incident.
Coppola and his wife Dee have custody of Bryce and have raised
the boy since he was a toddler. Coppola said Bryce is aware that
something is wrong. “Papa, did you do something bad?” Bryce was
related to have said.
What about calls for his resignation? Monson asked. Should
public officials be held to a higher standard?
“I don’t really know how to answer that question,” said Coppola,
who added he’s received scores of e-mails, phone calls and even
cards of support since his arrest. “(They say) you’re doing a
really good job as mayor. Don’t let the naysayers talk you out of
it
staying.”
So has the mayor entertained the notion of stepping down?
“It’s not even on the table,” said Coppola. “You can count on
‘no.’ Not only ‘no,’ but
‘hell no.”
To the question, “Would you drink and drive again?” Coppola
said, “Not only ‘no,’ but ‘hell no.'”
Finally, “Do you have a drinking problem?” Monson asked, noting
that Coppola’s admission of a bout with heavy drinking earlier in
his life raised a red flag.
Coppola deflected Monson’s suggestion, talking about how
difficult the divorce was. “It changes your perspective
on about
things,” he said.
He repeated that being Bryce’s dad gives him an incentive to
stay sober. “I don’t want
to set that kind of example for him,” “My wife doesn’t drink
at all, and we don’t keep liquor in the house because I don’t want
to set that kind of example for Bryce.” Coppola said.
Coppola also had a message for the locals. “I would like to
apologize to the city of Port Orchard for embarrassing our city,”
he said. “And I’d like to apologize to my family.”
So Dori, about that name, it’s Lary, with one “r,” like Cary
Bozeman. (I don’t know what this is all about; it’s just something
with our public officials here in Kitsap.) And it’s “Cop” — as in
“Oh, no, the cops are here.” — “po” — as in “podunk,” the image
we’re trying to shed — and “la” as in do-re-mi-etc. Thanks for your
interest in our town, and you’re welcome.
Chris Henry, South Kitsap/ government reporter