Grand Rapids, MI - An off-duty Rockford police sergeant was going nearly 100 mph before he was stopped on his motorcycle and arrested for drunken driving, according to police video.Kent County Sheriff's Deputy Mario Morey stopped the sergeant, Aaron Michael Sawyer, on May 31.He said he passed Sawyer's motorcycle on West River Drive, spun around pursued the motorcycle, which stopped in front of Rio Grande restaurant on Northland Drive near Cannonsburg Road."What the (profanity) are you doing?" Morey asks after getting out of his patrol car. "Are you kidding me?""I'm so sorry, Mario," Sawyer responds.Morey said: "I called it out on the air as a pursuit."The video, released by Kent County Sheriff's Department under a Freedom of Information request, shows Morey driving behind the motorcycle before Sawyer eventually stopped. Sawyer said he didn't immediately see the deputy's car behind him.In the video, Sawyer repeatedly apologizes. He told the deputy he had a couple of beers after attending a funeral, before the Rockford officer says he had maybe four or five.He was put through roadside sobriety tests – walking heel-to-toe, reciting parts of the alphabet and counting with a foot in the air – before the deputy asked him to take a preliminary breath test.Police say he had a blood-alcohol level of 0.17 percent, which is considered "super drunk" under Michigan law. A motorist is presumed intoxication at 0.08 percent.Morey told Sawyer he put both of them in a bad position."Aaron, I don't like this any more than you do, but it is what it is, right?"Later, Morey said, "Don't apologize, Aaron. It sucks for both of us, right?"Sawyer later pleaded guilty to driving while intoxicated. He was placed on probation for one year.He told a judge: "A decision made in one moment can affect my life and others' in a very negative way."He spent one day in jail and faces up to 92 days in jail if he violates probation. His license was suspended for six months but he can apply for a restricted license after 30 days. He was suspended by Rockford police without pay.