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06-12-2013, 12:23 PM #1
Suspect in DUI Crash is Illegal Immigrant - another "Dreamer"
We almost need a separate sub forum for drunk illegal aliens and the mayhem that they cause.. This one is 26, so he would qualify for the unchecked Obama amnesty. JMO
Authorities: Suspect in DUI Crash is Illegal Immigrant
Motorist alleged to have injured five in Ashley Phosphate Road crash is undocumented Mexican immigrant.
By Adam Crisp
June 11, 2013
Five people were injured Saturday when a motorist plowed through an accident scene.Credit North Charleston Police
The man charged with plowing through an Ashley Phosphate Road accident scene, injuring five people over the weekend is an undocumented Mexican immigrant, according to media reports.
The crash happened early Saturday morning when Felix Garcia-Romero, 26, allegedly plowed into the scene of an accident that was already being investigated by authorities.
Garcia-Romero is being held in the Charleston County jail on a $300,000 bond, according to court records. He's charged with three countes of felony DUI, driving without a license, insurance and operating a vehicle without a seatbelt.
ICE Eastern Seaboard Communications Director Vincent Picard said Tuesday that the agency had placed a "detainer" on Garcia-Romero, which ensures they will be notified by local law enforcement prior to his release from custody, according to Live5News.
Picard said the detainer will not impede the criminal prosecution Garcia-Romero is currently undergoing.
LISTEN: 911 audio of the crash.
Three of the five injured victims suffered broken bones, according to a police report. Two of the injured parties were firefighters. One firefighter, Darin Kingery, remained in the hospital Monday with serious injuries related to the crash, according to the Post and Courier.http://goosecreek.patch.com/articles...video-14766308
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06-12-2013, 12:29 PM #2
Police reports, calls: All calm at North Charleston crash site until drunken driver plowed through
Andrew Knapp
Monday, June 10, 2013
This screen capture from a police dashboard video camera shows the scene at a crash site after a man accused of driving while intoxicated plowed through the scene, injuring six people, including two firefighters
All was calm after two cars crashed Saturday morning on Ashley Phosphate Road in North Charleston.
“No one’s hurt,” a 911 caller told a dispatcher. “It was just a T-bone.”
- Felix Garcia-Romero faces three felony DUI charges.
- Darin Kingery, a 12-year veteran of the North Charleston Fire Department, was seriously hurt.
Police officers and firefighters arrived to make sure no one was seriously injured. They intended to direct the removal of a disabled car from the traffic lanes.
Then, young women screamed. Some cried. Police officers yelled.
“We need more units!” a police officer barked into his radio. “Send another EMS. We have another wreck! One firefighter down! Two females down!”
Fifteen minutes after the first collision, the police said a drunken man in a Honda tried to avoid a firetruck meant to protect first-responders by veering into oncoming traffic lanes. The man didn’t have a driver’s license, insurance or documents indicating that he was in the country legally.
His Honda hit two firefighters, three 18-year-old women and one girl. Three people were seriously injured, including Darin Kingery, a 12-year veteran of the North Charleston Fire Department.
Police communications, video and a report released Monday revealed new details about the wreck that prompted the arrest of 26-year-old Felix Garcia-Romero of Hawthorne Drive.
He faces three counts of felony driving under the influence. Experts sampled his blood, but the police did not indicate any test results.
Garcia-Romero remained behind bars Monday in lieu of $300,000 bail. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement also asked that he be held at the jail as the agency investigated his legal status.
It was Garcia-Romero’s first arrest in South Carolina.
An attempt to contact his family was unsuccessful. Two hard hats, a pair of work boots, three carpenter levels, tubes of caulking and 5-gallon buckets sat on the front porch of his mobile home.
Kingery, the fire engineer, remained in intensive care Monday after suffering several broken bones, department spokeswoman Bianca Sancic said. Firefighter Joshua Sader, who has been on the job for six months, was treated for minor injuries that day and later returned to work.
Conditions of the other four victims were not immediately known. At least one suffered a broken leg. The 18-year-olds were identified as Areriel Hayward of North Charleston, Abagail Wedlake of Mount Pleasant and Shateia Ellis of North Charleston.
Authorities responded to the first wreck between a Mazda 626 and a Chevrolet Impala at 1:44 a.m. near the Plantation Road intersection.
The Chevrolet blocked two lanes and part of the third.
An airbag had deployed in one car, and one person was complaining of arm pain. But the crash was minor.
“Everybody’s out and about,” a 911 caller said. “One lady is sleeping in the back.”
Fire crews placed a truck in a “defensive” position to help protect themselves, the police and motorists, the department spokesman said. They also wore reflective vests, a protocol to prevent a second crash, Sancic said.
But soon after, Garcia-Romero’s black Honda left the northbound lanes and plowed into the disabled Chevrolet and the people standing next to it.
The police scrambled to block traffic altogether and prevent further mayhem.
“We need everyone to just shut down Ashley Phosphate,” an officer radioed to others.
“We need both ways shut down for safety.”
Officers quickly suspected that Garcia-Romero had been drinking.
A video from a police cruiser shows officers pulling him from the Honda. He smelled of alcohol, and his eyes were red, the police noted in an incident report.
Officer Jonathan Lawrence walked him in front of the cruiser’s camera, and Garcia-Romero stumbled. He fidgeted through the pockets of his jeans.
“How much have you had to drink?” Lawrence said.
“Two beer,” Garcia-Romero said.
“Two beers?” Lawrence said.
Thirty-eight seconds after Garcia-Romero got out of his car, Lawrence cuffed his hands and read him his rights. Again losing his balance, Garcia-Romero leaned back on the officer as he was being handcuffed.
He sat down in the back of the patrol car as the crash victims continued to scream and cry, the video shows.
He mumbled words in Spanish and vomited on himself.
http://www.postandcourier.com/articl...PC16/130619938
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06-12-2013, 01:14 PM #3
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A video from a police cruiser shows officers pulling him from the Honda. He smelled of alcohol, and his eyes were red, the police noted in an incident report.
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