LAS VEGAS — Las Vegas officers found Raiders football player Charles Snowden ''passed out'' behind the wheel of a Jeep Cherokee, its engine running as it balanced atop a retaining wall, before his arrest on a misdemeanor charge of driving under the influence of alcohol, according to a police report.
Blood tests showed Snowden's blood-alcohol content was about .19%, or more than twice the legal limit, according to a report by a police forensic scientist. The legal limit for drivers in Nevada is 0.08%.
The NFL, the Raiders and Snowden's attorneys acknowledged Thursday the 26-year-old first-year defensive end was arrested early Tuesday after Las Vegas police responded shortly before midnight Monday to a report of a ''suspicious'' vehicle near a busy intersection southwest of the Las Vegas Strip. He was later released.
A Las Vegas justice of the peace on Thursday revised the case schedule to set Snowden's arraignment for next Tuesday.
Snowden's attorneys, David Chesnoff and Richard Schonfeld, acknowledged the arrest but declined to describe the circumstances. The Raiders said they were in contact with the NFL.
''The club will not comment further as this is a legal matter,'' a team statement said.
''Mr. Snowden will be entering a not guilty plea and we will respond in court, which is the appropriate forum,'' his attorneys said in a statement.
It was not immediately clear if the arrest would affect Snowden's status with the team. He has played every game this season, including in Sunday's loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Florida. The Raiders next host the Atlanta Falcons in Las Vegas on Monday.