Round Rock Man Sentenced to Life for Seventh DWI, Deadly Weapon Finding in Comal County

Comal County, TX - On October 31, 2025, Visiting Judge Dan Mills sentenced Patrick Norman Didion, 56, of Round Rock, to life in prison following his conviction by a Comal County jury for Driving While Intoxicated with two or more previous convictions of the same offense. The jury also made a deadly weapon finding, determining that Didion had operated his vehicle in a manner capable of causing death or serious bodily injury.

At the sentencing, Judge Mills addressed Didion directly, saying, “The day of reckoning has shown up. I don’t see any reason to afford him any more opportunities to get out on the road and drive and kill somebody. I don’t enjoy doing this, but I think it is for the safety of the community that he should be given a life sentence.”

The Incident

The case originated on January 1, 2024, when New Braunfels Police Department officers were dispatched to the southbound frontage road of IH-35 North in reference to a possible road rage incident. A 911 caller reported that Didion, driving a Toyota Tacoma, suddenly pulled out in front of his vehicle, forcing him to brake hard and causing damage to equipment in the truck bed. The caller described how Didion then put the vehicle in reverse and drove the wrong way against one-way traffic before stopping behind his truck and aggressively approaching the caller, saying, “Come on, hombre.” Officers noted the smell of alcohol on Didion’s breath.

Didion initially claimed he was driving from Austin to San Antonio on a “work errand” but became increasingly uncooperative and hostile toward law enforcement. Field sobriety tests confirmed intoxication, with officers observing difficulty maintaining balance, swaying while standing, and failing coordination tests. Didion refused a breathalyzer, prompting officers to obtain a warrant for a blood draw. Laboratory testing revealed a blood alcohol concentration of 0.214—nearly three times the legal limit in Texas.

Evidence and Trial

During trial, the jury heard from the 911 caller, NBPD Officer Sylvia Powell, and a Department of Public Safety criminalist who analyzed Didion’s blood. Body-worn camera footage was played, showing Didion swaying, failing the field sobriety tests, verbally aggressive behavior, and repeatedly stating that this was his seventh DWI and that he would go to prison for life. Officer Powell testified that Didion admitted, “I can’t do that [expletive] sober,” during the tests…

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