Green’s Dictionary of Slang

d and d n.

1. the criminal charge of drunk and disorderly.

[UK]Answers 2 March, 218, col. 1: Last New Year’s Day [...] the old man was up for D and D, trying to break a window with his broom [F&H].
[UK]‘Doss Chiderdoss’ ‘The Rhyme of the Rusher’ in Sporting Times 29 Oct. n.p.: And he laid there, weighing out prayers for me, / Without hearing the plates of meat / Of a slop, who pinched him for ‘d. and d.’.
[US]M. Braly It’s Cold Out There (2005) 195: We’ll find ourselves with thirty days D and D.
[US]A. Brooke Last Toke 63: Got that punk mother’s white ass busted fo’ D&D.
[US]R. Campbell In La-La Land We Trust (1999) 92: Chances were, an old drunk told him, they’d give him two days on the D and D.
[US]R. Campbell Sweet La-La Land (1999) 169: You want me to pull the plug on him on a D and D?

2. a deaf and dumb person.

[US]P. Kendall Dict. Service Sl. n.p.: a D.D. . . . a deaf and dumb person.