Driver indicted in fatal teen crash
NORWICH – The District Attorney’s Office succeeded in convincing a grand jury to indict a 17-year-old Norwich youth with aggravated vehicular homicide and several other felonies in the death of a Bainbridge teen.
The Chenango County grand jury indicted Trebor E. Hoxie on nine felonies in the fatal aftermath of an alleged alcohol-related crash in April involving a van with four teen passengers.
Court documents claim Hoxie’s blood alcohol level was .1 percent at the time of the accident; the legal limit in New York State for a driving while intoxicated charge is .08 percent.
The top charge facing Hoxie is a B class felony carrying a maximum sentence of up to 25 years in state prison.
Ashley Crisell, 18, of Gilbertsville-Mt. Upton High School, was pronounced dead at Wilson Regional Medical Center in Binghamton following the April 18 crash.
At 5:55 a.m. that day, Hoxie was allegedly operating a green 2001 Dodge Caravan along Route 206 with the four passengers. Troopers said Hoxie lost control of the vehicle while negotiating a turn and hit a guide rail, which caused the van to violently roll over before coming to a rest on its wheels in the roadway. Troopers said none of the teens were wearing seatbelts and all of the occupants were ejected from the vehicle as it rolled down the highway.
Kathryn McLaughlin, 17, of Mount Upton, suffered a skull fracture, broken pelvis, and had to have her right foot amputated.
Darren Houck, 18, of Norwich, suffered multiple injuries, including a punctured lung and broken arm.
Kathryn Card, 17, of Morris, suffered a broken right shoulder and a cut to her left upper thigh.
Hoxie was treated at Lourdes Hospital for minor injuries before being released into the custody of the state troopers.
He is currently being held at the Chenango County Correctional Facility in lieu of $200,000 cash bail.
New York State Troopers later charged Joseph M. Beardsley with providing alcohol to the teens. He faces five counts of first degree unlawfully dealing with a child and one count of making a punishable false written statement. The charges are A class misdemeanors carrying a maximum one year sentence in local jail.
The grand jury handed down several other indictments last Wednesday, including four other people charged with felony DWIs, E class felonies carrying a maximum sentence of 7 years in state prison.
• Thomas Toomer II, 28, Oxford, was indicted for driving while intoxicated for allegedly driving along Mitchell St. in Norwich n May 7 under the influence of alcohol. He has a prior DWI conviction from February 2007 in the Town of Norwich and a driving while ability impaired (DWAI) conviction from January 2004 in the Village of Greene.
• Steven R. Carlsson, 45, was indicted for DWI for allegedly having a blood alcohol level (BAC) of .15 percent in the Town of New Berlin Sept. 27. Carlsson has a prior DWI conviction from September 2007 in the Town of Plymouth and a prior DWAI from July 2001 from the Town of Willet Court in Cortland County.
• Daniel Grace, 51, of Whitney Point was indicted for DWI over an incident that took place April 19 in the Town of Smithville on Round Pond Rd. Grace has a prior DWI conviction from July 2005 from Chenango County Court.
• Ward C. Lozier was indicted on misdemeanor DWI and felony aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle. Allegedly Lozier operated a vehicle under the influence of alcohol with a suspended licenses along South Broad Street in the City of Norwich. He has not had a prior alcohol related conviction in the last ten years.
• Jody A. Seymour, 36, and Charles J. Hughes, 44, both of Sherburne, were indicted for third degree grand larceny. Allegedly the two stole more than $3,000 from the New York State Dept. of Labor by collecting unemployment while allegedly gainfully employed at Northland Associates Inc.
• Richard C. Rosa, 70, Bainbridge, was indicted for possessing an obscene sexual performance of a child, under the age of 16, on his computer.
• Edward J. Panus was indicted on three counts of first degree offering a false instrument for filing. Allegedly he received money for a disability preventing him from working from the New York State Insurance Fund while he maintained gainful employment at Ponderosa Fish Farm.
The Chenango County grand jury indicted Trebor E. Hoxie on nine felonies in the fatal aftermath of an alleged alcohol-related crash in April involving a van with four teen passengers.
Court documents claim Hoxie’s blood alcohol level was .1 percent at the time of the accident; the legal limit in New York State for a driving while intoxicated charge is .08 percent.
The top charge facing Hoxie is a B class felony carrying a maximum sentence of up to 25 years in state prison.
Ashley Crisell, 18, of Gilbertsville-Mt. Upton High School, was pronounced dead at Wilson Regional Medical Center in Binghamton following the April 18 crash.
At 5:55 a.m. that day, Hoxie was allegedly operating a green 2001 Dodge Caravan along Route 206 with the four passengers. Troopers said Hoxie lost control of the vehicle while negotiating a turn and hit a guide rail, which caused the van to violently roll over before coming to a rest on its wheels in the roadway. Troopers said none of the teens were wearing seatbelts and all of the occupants were ejected from the vehicle as it rolled down the highway.
Kathryn McLaughlin, 17, of Mount Upton, suffered a skull fracture, broken pelvis, and had to have her right foot amputated.
Darren Houck, 18, of Norwich, suffered multiple injuries, including a punctured lung and broken arm.
Kathryn Card, 17, of Morris, suffered a broken right shoulder and a cut to her left upper thigh.
Hoxie was treated at Lourdes Hospital for minor injuries before being released into the custody of the state troopers.
He is currently being held at the Chenango County Correctional Facility in lieu of $200,000 cash bail.
New York State Troopers later charged Joseph M. Beardsley with providing alcohol to the teens. He faces five counts of first degree unlawfully dealing with a child and one count of making a punishable false written statement. The charges are A class misdemeanors carrying a maximum one year sentence in local jail.
The grand jury handed down several other indictments last Wednesday, including four other people charged with felony DWIs, E class felonies carrying a maximum sentence of 7 years in state prison.
• Thomas Toomer II, 28, Oxford, was indicted for driving while intoxicated for allegedly driving along Mitchell St. in Norwich n May 7 under the influence of alcohol. He has a prior DWI conviction from February 2007 in the Town of Norwich and a driving while ability impaired (DWAI) conviction from January 2004 in the Village of Greene.
• Steven R. Carlsson, 45, was indicted for DWI for allegedly having a blood alcohol level (BAC) of .15 percent in the Town of New Berlin Sept. 27. Carlsson has a prior DWI conviction from September 2007 in the Town of Plymouth and a prior DWAI from July 2001 from the Town of Willet Court in Cortland County.
• Daniel Grace, 51, of Whitney Point was indicted for DWI over an incident that took place April 19 in the Town of Smithville on Round Pond Rd. Grace has a prior DWI conviction from July 2005 from Chenango County Court.
• Ward C. Lozier was indicted on misdemeanor DWI and felony aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle. Allegedly Lozier operated a vehicle under the influence of alcohol with a suspended licenses along South Broad Street in the City of Norwich. He has not had a prior alcohol related conviction in the last ten years.
• Jody A. Seymour, 36, and Charles J. Hughes, 44, both of Sherburne, were indicted for third degree grand larceny. Allegedly the two stole more than $3,000 from the New York State Dept. of Labor by collecting unemployment while allegedly gainfully employed at Northland Associates Inc.
• Richard C. Rosa, 70, Bainbridge, was indicted for possessing an obscene sexual performance of a child, under the age of 16, on his computer.
• Edward J. Panus was indicted on three counts of first degree offering a false instrument for filing. Allegedly he received money for a disability preventing him from working from the New York State Insurance Fund while he maintained gainful employment at Ponderosa Fish Farm.
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