"Yeah, I'd had a few the night before and was going to go down and get Vs and bits and pieces. The cop took the key off my ute at the station and, okay, fair enough I didn't want to drive, I just wanted to get my tools home, that's all. It's not like they're locked or anything they're just sitting [on the ute] on the side of the road. That's my livelihood down the tubes."
He admitted he shouldn't have been behind the wheel, despite having his last beer at 1am, and said he would plead guilty to the drink driving charges.
"I was way over. I stopped [drinking] about 1am. Yeah I felt okay but I shouldn't have been driving." Kerr disputes not stopping for police and said by the time he saw the sirens he was only a short distance from his house and pulled into the driveway of his Morrice Ave home.
The incident had now sworn him off drinking, he said.
"What I did was stupid and to anyone who is contemplating drinking and driving, don't, just walk."
Kerr said he spent the night in the cells with another man who was also processed for drink driving twice in one day.
He said the man was an arborist and had been stopped at Waingaro, near Ngaruawahia, but he also went back to his vehicle as he was worried about his tools.
Kerr was remanded without plea on two charges of drink driving, driving while suspended and failing to stop.
He will reappear in the Morrinsville District Court in February.
Waikato police declined to comment further on the case as it was now before the court, but yesterday Mr Bird said drink drivers needed to "grow up".
"Think about your actions, think about the consequences and think about how you can make a difference. Already this year alcohol and/or drugs have been contributing factors in 15 fatal crashes in the Waikato, your decisions can kill."