DUBLIN — An Oakland police officer was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence and resisting arrest Wednesday evening on Interstate 580, authorities said Thursday.

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Officer Bryan Budgin, 37, was arrested by the California Highway Patrol at about 11:49 p.m. on eastbound I-580 at San Ramon Road in Dublin, according to the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office. Budgin, of Walnut Creek, was riding a motorcycle and had been stopped for speeding, according to the CHP arrest report.

Budgin was booked at Santa Rita Jail on the two misdemeanors. He posted $10,000 bail and was out of custody as of Thursday morning, according to jail records.

Budgin, who according to city records was hired by the Oakland Police Department in February 2012, was one of four officers placed on administrative leave following a drunken, off-duty incident on Dec. 7, 2015. It is unclear if Budgin has returned to patrol.

He listed his occupation as “Oakland PD” according to jail records and was included in a roster of sworn personnel released by the city this week in response to a public records request.

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Police spokeswoman Johnna Watson said in an email that Budgin is still employed by the department and OPD is aware of his arrest. Watson declined to comment further. Reached Thursday, Budgin immediately hung up the phone.

Budgin was initially included in a lawsuit filed by Alameda County probation officer Olga Cortez and her husband, who accused Officer Cullen Faeth of being intoxicated and assaulting the couple while trying to get inside their Oakland hills home in December 2015. Faeth was charged with four misdemeanor criminal counts and has since left the department.

According to authorities and court documents, before ending up at the Cortez home, Faeth, then-Sgt. Joseph Turner and two other Oakland officers were drinking at a nearby bar. A federal lawsuit filed by Cortez attorney John Burris named Budgin as being one of the four officers.

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However, U.S. District Judge Thelton Henderson in a February 2017 order dismissed Budgin as a defendant in the case. In his ruling, Henderson wrote that Budgin and the three others were placed on paid leave after the incident.