Teen Sentenced to Prison for Texting-While-Driving Death

rockin'robin

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Harsh punishment is warning to others not to text and drive.

A Massachusetts teenager was sentenced this week to two years in prison and loss of his license for 15 years after being convicted of motor vehicle homicide. Aaron Deveau, 18, is the first driver in the state to face such charges. On February 20, 2011, Deveau was driving and his vehicle swerved across the center line, crashing head on into Daniel Bowley's truck, causing life-ending injuries.

Bowley, a 55-year-old father of three, sustained massive head trauma from the accident and spent 18 days in a Boston hospital before passing away. Deveau pleaded not guilty to texting while driving, and claimed in his testimony that he was distracted by the amount of homework he had and had sent his last text message in the parking lot of the grocery store where he worked. He said he had left the phone on the passenger's seat the whole time, but phone records showed that Devea sent a text message at 2:34 p.m. and received a response at 2:35 p.m.—the time of the crash.

Texting while driving is a crime in 38 states, but the illegality doesn't seem to deter many people, as watching rush-hour traffic can seem like watching bumper cars as people drift in and out of lane lines.

District Court Judge Stephen Abany said that the maximum sentence for motor vehicle homicide was doled out to send a message of deterrence to the state's drivers.

Deterrence "really seems to come to play in this case. People really want to be safe on the highways," he said. People need to "keep their eyes on the road."

"People can violate these laws and there really isn't much of a deterrence without examples like this. Clearly, being distracted is an extremely deadly thing that's going on in this country and people need to understand they just can't do it," Teater said.

Texting while driving is a crime in 38 states, but the illegality doesn't seem to deter many people, as watching rush-hour traffic can seem like watching bumper cars as people drift in and out of lane lines.

"This is a threat that did not exist just a few years ago, and we've never had to understand how being connected to a mobile world was dangerous," Teater said. "Unfortunately, now the way we're beginning to understand the danger of it is by people getting hurt and dying. And that needs to change."

Teen Sentenced to Prison for Texting-While-Driving Death | Web2Carz

David Teater, senior director of the transportation initiative at the National Safety Council, agreed with the ruling.
 
wow thats kind of excessive jail 2 years fine, but 15 years no driving is silly, maybe 5 not 15...
 
Like I said in gun threads, laws was made to be broken. Nobody gives damn about laws and breaking it anyway. Sad!
 
wow thats kind of excessive jail 2 years fine, but 15 years no driving is silly, maybe 5 not 15...
A Massachusetts teenager was sentenced this week to two years in prison and loss of his license for 15 years after being convicted of motor vehicle homicide.
That's why. He's lucky that he gets only two years jail time. !5 yrs of no license makes sense. The other driver is DEAD because of him.

What's more, the judge wanted to make it very serious so other drivers have to obey the law, otherwise they will get that kind of sentence as well. Maybe sentencing in other states like Calif are stricter than Mass.
 
wow thats kind of excessive jail 2 years fine, but 15 years no driving is silly, maybe 5 not 15...

No...this boy got off too easy. He should have served more time in jail and had the license permanently taken away. I'm sure he contributed nothing to this man's family for the medical expenses that piled up when he ligered between life and death, he'll pay nothing for the funeral costs and he'll pay nothing to help the man's wife raise their family with him gone. He got off way to easy considering he killed a man and couldn't even admit that he was at fault. Other people are distressed by things far more serious than homework and they don't text/call and drive.

Laura
 
That's why. He's lucky that he gets only two years jail time. !5 yrs of no license makes sense. The other driver is DEAD because of him.

What's more, the judge wanted to make it very serious so other drivers have to obey the law, otherwise they will get that kind of sentence as well. Maybe sentencing in other states like Calif are stricter than Mass.

yes, i can see that, "the part to demonstrate the seriousness of the loss and that justice process intend highlight this' but still i dont have to agree, and I am saying it is excessive...mobile phone calling, driving was so 90's and now its as bad as murder?!! wtf, like WTF, causing death got him jail for 2 years bad enough, but 15 years to drag on...is abit silly...surely i dont think he/she will want to do that again.
 
I grew up with a kid, now young man, who drove on a busy road doing 90 and plowed into the driver ahead of him. The impact caused the victim to go through the glass even though he was wearing a safety belt, and he was killed instantly. The young man served far more time in jail than this kid which surprises me because there's no difference between speeding and killing a person, and texting and killing a person. Either way a person is dead and a family, in this case too, was without a father and provider. Obviously going to schools and talking to kids has no impact. Stricter laws will. In the case with the kid from my neighborhood, he also had his license revoked for 15 years.
 
so, intending to kill is to be treated as exactly the same way as kill by an accident? if you were texting while driving, like if it was your mom saying, meet at the other coffee shop and you're confused where it is, and the time frame for lunch hour is quite tight, travel little busy...then suddenly you ran over a man who dropped his wallet , bent over to pick ut up you, too busy on mobile to really notice it, and yet you feel SOo bad, but would you, yourself actaully think the law is fair?? im not so sure, if it was in YOUR shoes...
thats why i think its a bit crazy ok drink drving is different because WE KNOW drink will make driving to become a dangerous affair, no two ways about it...hmmm
im still struggling to think its fair.
 
No, it's not silly! The other driver is DEAD. Imagine if the other driver was your sister or brother or son or daughter or wife.

I was messing with him - no serious.
 
im just too tired to get into debates i need to go out now, been home for too long...
 
im just too tired to get into debates i need to go out now, been home for too long...

I don't think that you are debating and it looks not bad.

I don't have ground to disagree with court but too extreme, maybe.
 
so, intending to kill is to be treated as exactly the same way as kill by an accident? if you were texting while driving, like if it was your mom saying, meet at the other coffee shop and you're confused where it is, and the time frame for lunch hour is quite tight, travel little busy...then suddenly you ran over a man who dropped his wallet , bent over to pick ut up you, too busy on mobile to really notice it, and yet you feel SOo bad, but would you, yourself actaully think the law is fair?? im not so sure, if it was in YOUR shoes...
thats why i think its a bit crazy ok drink drving is different because WE KNOW drink will make driving to become a dangerous affair, no two ways about it...hmmm
im still struggling to think its fair.

If you're behind the wheel of the car, that's your only focus. If you get a phone call, you need to pull over to the side of the road and deal with it, not pretend to be driving when your attention is actually elsewhere, other than who's ahead of you. You can't tell me that a person doesn't realize they're driving a machine that weighs a ton and is capable of taking a person out. They know. People know if you text or call on the cell while driving, you're not paying attention to what you should be doing in that moment. They know why there's been heated debate about cellphone use when driving. You can't avoid it.

Neither young man, the one from my neighborhood and the boy in this case, intended to kill...but they did just that. If you're texting with your foot on the pedal...then what's that called? You're still driving...and if you choose to do 90 down a busy street...knowing people are coming in and out of stores and stopping at stop lights....how are you innocent of killing a person? People know it's dangerous, they just don't care for the same reason drunks don't. They don't believe they'll be caught.

The laws aren't fair. Two men were taken from their families, and their children were left without a parent...and the wives were without their life partner and now the sole bread winner...and no amount of jail time or lack of a driver's license will ever bring back the world they knew before the accident.
 
Wirelessly posted

People goto prison for vehicle manslaughter all the time. When people are careless behind the wheel and cause death many times do have prison time. I knew someone that fell asleep behind the wheel killing two people went to prison for 10 years.
 
so, intending to kill is to be treated as exactly the same way as kill by an accident? if you were texting while driving, like if it was your mom saying, meet at the other coffee shop and you're confused where it is, and the time frame for lunch hour is quite tight, travel little busy...then suddenly you ran over a man who dropped his wallet , bent over to pick ut up you, too busy on mobile to really notice it, and yet you feel SOo bad, but would you, yourself actaully think the law is fair?? im not so sure, if it was in YOUR shoes...
thats why i think its a bit crazy ok drink drving is different because WE KNOW drink will make driving to become a dangerous affair, no two ways about it...hmmm
im still struggling to think its fair.

intending to kill (which is called murder) carries a harsher penalty than accidentally killing a person does... plus some murder cases can end up with death penalty.
 
When I use to pick my girls up from high school I would watch all the cars pulling out of the parking lot. 7 out of 10 kids had their phones to their ears.

Texting while driving is just as bad as drinking and driving. My kids know if they get pulled over for texting and driving we take them off our auto insurance.
 
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