AITA for refusing to pick up my brother from the police station, forcing him to call our parents?

Getting arrested for drunk driving is a serious mistake with real consequences — and sometimes those consequences include facing family without a safety net. When a sibling asks for help to avoid accountability, it can create a difficult choice between loyalty and responsibility.

One 23-year-old woman refused to pick up her 27-year-old brother from the police station after his DUI arrest because she had to get to work on time. He begged her to come so he wouldn’t have to call their parents, but she told him he should have thought of that before driving drunk. Now he’s refusing to speak to her until she apologizes, and she wonders if she’s the asshole for letting him face the fallout alone.

‘AITA for refusing to pick up my brother from the police station, forcing him to call our parents?’

The call came at an inconvenient time.

Sorry for any mistakes My (23F) brother (27M) called me from the police station 4 days ago, asking me to come pick him up because he got arrested for drunk...

I told him that I had to get ready for work and didn’t have the time to drive by the police station He answered that I could still take 5...

He still insisted on me coming to pick him up because he didn’t want to call our parents, I answered that if he didn’t want to have to call our...

The aftermath brought family tension.

I received a text from him around 10AM, saying that what I did was fucked up, that he had to call our parent at 6AM and that they were super...

But I’ve surprisingly also received a text from my mom, telling me that although she’s not happy about my brother, I still should of had picked him up because family...

and more important than work My dad, him, told me to not feel guilty about anything and that they would’ve found out eventually I still feel a little bit guilty...

She remains firm in her decision.

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Edit: Okay thank you all for your input, NTA or YTA. I’m still gonna try to have a conversation with, at least, my parents. I’m not saying I’m gotta fight...

This situation centers on natural consequences and personal responsibility. The brother’s DUI arrest is a serious offense with potential to harm others, and his attempt to hide it from parents by asking his sister to rescue him shifts the burden onto her. Her refusal protected her own job and refused to enable avoidance of accountability.

The mother’s view that “family is more important than work” overlooks the broader principle: protecting someone from consequences can reinforce poor behavior. The father’s support shows he understands the brother must face this. The brother’s silent treatment is manipulation to force an apology for her not rescuing him.

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Family therapist Dr. John Gottman emphasizes that “enabling avoidance of consequences erodes trust and responsibility in relationships; healthy families allow adults to experience logical outcomes of their choices.” Here, the sister set a clear boundary — she won’t cover for illegal, dangerous behavior.

She could offer a calm conversation with the brother about responsibility (not an apology), but she’s not obligated to. Prioritizing her job and mental health is reasonable. The family may benefit from discussing enabling patterns, but she’s not responsible for fixing his choices.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Social media overwhelmingly supported the woman’s decision. Most viewed the brother’s request as manipulative and praised her for not enabling him. Commenters emphasized personal responsibility for drunk driving and refused sympathy for avoiding consequences.

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Strong support for refusing and no sympathy for drunk driving

ConfusedOldDude − I love flipping these around. “I was caught driving drunk and my sister wouldn’t skip work to bail me out so now I’m not speaking to her. AITA?...

not_a_bad_egg − NTA - If your 27yo brother can't even face up to his parents and take responsibility for his actions, that's a 'him' problem.

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Ticking-over − NTA. The guy’s 27. Why does he need his parents (or you) to pick him up?

No-Yam-1231 − NTA, 5 minutes is never 5 minutes, it would have put you late for work, and was in no way your fault.

Your dad is right, he couldn't hide it for ever, and asking you in the first place puts you in the position of trying to help him hide it. He...

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OIWantKenobi − NTA. Your brother is NOT a good person for drunk driving. He could have killed someone. He deserved to sit in jail.

I have ZERO sympathy for drunk drivers. Whether or not you had to go to work is irrelevant. Have your parents always tried to apologize or cover for his behavior?

Slight-Bar-534 − NTA. I left my SIL in jail for drunk driving. I have no sympathy for drunk drivers.

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Altruistic_Isopod_11 − NTA - is your mom in the habit of making excuses for him? I would argue that your job is more important than picking up your drunk brother...

dehydratedrain − NTA. Drunk driving isn't a mistake, it's a conscious decision that can hurt or k__l innocent people. He answered that I could still take 5 minutes for my...

If it was only 5 minutes out of the way, he could've walked home in 15 minutes. I still should of had picked him up because family is family and...

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No, responsible decisions are more important than fixing an i__ot mistake My dad, him, told me to not feel guilty about anything and that they would’ve found out eventually Yeah,

and it would've been "oh, that was months ago and nothing came of it. No need to get mad now. " You made the right decision. It isn't your fault...

Turbulent_Ebb5669 − NTA and don't you dare apologize for not covering for him. Your dad is right, and he has your back.

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Pointing out manipulation and consequences

Brohma312 − He couldnt call someone to pick him up before her drove drunk? NTA

dazed1984 − NTA. Why did he need anyone to pick him up? Why couldn’t he get himself home?

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Cannabis-aficionado − NTA. Let him not speak to you. Once he gets through the legal side of things it'll cost some cash. You wouldn't want him hitting you up for...

Practical and blunt takes on responsibility

craftycat1135 − I have zero sympathy for drunk drivers who are endangering themselves or others from making a preventable and stupid choice. I would have made him wait a day...

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Definitely not risk losing my job for being late. Five minutes? Things are never five minutes and was he expecting to drop you off at work and he drive your...

Melin_Lavendel_Rosa − NTA He got in is car while drunk, got arrested, and he thinks that YOU should apologise for not dropping everything to shield him from his consequenses? No.

He chose do drive, he needs to face the consequenses. Do not apologize. He is not your responsibility. His actions are not your responsibility.

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orion_nomad − NTA. He just didn't want your parents finding out, which is bogus. Personally I would have had all the time in the world to pick my sibling up...

This story highlights how enabling can prevent growth. The brother’s DUI was a serious, preventable choice with real danger to others. Asking his sister to rescue him from consequences shows avoidance rather than accountability. Her refusal protected her job and refused to participate in hiding his mistake. The mother’s reaction suggests a pattern of excusing him, while the father’s support shows understanding of natural consequences. The silent treatment is manipulation, not a reason to apologize.

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Have you ever had to let a family member face consequences for dangerous behavior? Do you think the sister should apologize to keep peace, or is holding firm the better long-term choice?

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