Teen Pleads Guilty To Homicide Charges For Deaths Of Two Of His Passengers in Crash
Austin Pederson, 18, of Stillwater, Minn., entered the plea in St. Croix County Circuit Court to two charges of homicide by negligent operation of a vehicle.
Pederson crashed his Volkswagen Jetta last June, and two of his passengers were thrown from his car and killed. The victims were Daishonna Payne, 17, and Alan Alwin, 26, both of Somerset, Wis.
The fatal crash took place in St. Croix County. Pederson and another passenger were injured in the accident.
I have very mixed feelings about this type of justice. Yes, something profound must be done to send a statement, yet here we have a teenager, who is just learning to drive, being convicted of a serious felony, for a mistake that any of us could make, any day. The St. Paul Pioneer Press reported that the criminal complaint says Pederson had a detectable amount of marijuana in his system when tests were done two hours after the crash.
If I had been his criminal defense attorney, I think I would have defended. Nothing can bring back the two dead young people, but marijuana in your urine does not convert a tragic motor vehicle accident into a homicide. Marijuana can stay in urine for 30 days. That doesn’t prove that Pederson was intoxicated or that his intoxication caused the wreck. Now, he is a convicted “murderer.” That is just a prosecutor overcharging. Had it been a routine car wreck, no criminal charges would have been filed.
Criminal sanctions should be imposed when the conduct is truly criminal, not when the result of negligent conduct is truly bad. Justice should have been left for the civil justice system.
Wisconsin Supreme Court May Rule On Paid-Sick-Day Ordinance
http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/84754612.html
The District 4 Court of Appeals Thursday requested that the state’s highest court to handle the appeal, because of its importance. The Supreme Court will have to decide whether it wants to look at the case.
The Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce has challenged a city ordinance that mandates that workers receive paid sick days. The MMAC maintains that will make the city less competitive and stifle jobs.
Laws on paid sick days are also being considered in New York City and Tacoma, Wash.
The Wisconsin Coalition Against Domestic Violence and the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign both both support of the Milwaukee ordinance.
The obvious issue in this case is whether a local common counsel has the power to make such a broad reaching economic rule. Local governments can only make laws which they are “enabled” to make by state legislature. I am guessing that Wisconsin laws do not give the Milwaukee Common Council this power. This kind of rule must come from the State Legislature, and even then, it might be subject to a claim that as it effects Interstate Commerce, it must come from the United States Congress.
Wisconsin Lawmaker, With Three DUI Arrests Under His Belt, Mounts Legal Challenge of Legislature’s Bid To Oust Him
Woods, who faces expulsion from the Wisconsin Legislature, is not going away quietly. He is raising legal issues, “detailed procedural questions,” as the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel put it, about his possible ouster.
http://www.jsonline.com/news/statepolitics/84362307.html
Wood’s attorney is arguing that the Assembly’s guidelines on how such expulsions should be handled are shaky at best. The lawyer seem to be hanging his hat on this argument: that Wood shouldn’t be punished by his fellow legislators for actions he took outside the Capitol that has nothing to do with his post as a lawmaker.
Under that reasoning, we suppose if Wood could have committed any crime and still be entitled to his seat in the Assembly.
Wood’s rap sheet is pretty long. Last year he was charged with: drunken driving, and marijuana and drug paraphernalia possession in Columbia Country; driving under the influence of drugs in Marathon County; and driving under the influence of drug and jumping bail in Monroe County.
Wood has resolved one of those cases, according to the Journal Sentinel. In a plea-bargain deal in Columbia County, Wood will plead no-contest to third-offense drunken driving charges. The marijuana and paraphernalia charges will be dismissed.
Under the plea, Wood could get 30 days to a year in jail, and be fined $600 to $2,000.
Those incidents were not Wood’s first run-ins with the law. In the early 1990s, Wood had two drunken driving convictions.
A special ethics committee will discuss Wood’s case at a hearing Wednesday.
From our perspective, drunk driving is a terribly serious offense. The first step towards injury prevention is to avoid accidents. Little increases the risk of an accident more than mixing alcohol and driving. Enough said.
Plane Makes Emergency Landing in South Wisconsin, Pilot Walks Away From Crash
http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/84354752.html
The pilot made the landing in Bloomfield in Walworth County after his engine plane’s engine conked out. He was flying to Aurora, Ill.
The pilot was taken to a Burlington hospital, but he reportedly didn’t suffer any major injuries. But the plane is a loss, sustaining major damage.
Investigators were set to visit the crash site Sunday night.
Missouri Considers Concussion-Sports Law – What About Wisconsin?
The proposed Missouri law, which targets high school players, mandates that athletes remain benched from practice or games until they get approval to return from a licensed health care worker trained in evaluating concussions.
The Missouri law is modeled after Washington state’s concussion legislation, which is named after Zackery Lystedt, a teen who sustained brain trauma after returning to a football game right after getting a concussion.
The Missouri State High School Activities Association says athletes shouldn’t get back on the field the same day they suffer a concussion. The group also recommends that players who sustain three concussions in a season should be barred from playing the rest of the season, and not be allowed to return to play until having a medical check-up.
The Missouri state association also mandates that athletes who lose consciousness can’t come back to play the same day without written permission from a doctor.
There are 3.8 million sports and recreation-related concussion each year, according to the Brain Injury Association of America.
Wisconsin hopefully won’t be far behind. For an excellent local resource on sports concussion, see http://wisportsconcussion.org/
Research Finds That Exercise Can Alleviate Post-Concussion Syndrome
Special exercise and rest help young athletes recover according to research conducted at the University at Buffalo. http://www.ubspectrum.com/article/41203
Having a player rest three weeks after sustaining a concussion and developing a custom exercise routine for him or her that reduces the symptoms of post-concussion syndrome, according to the report published in the January Clinical Journal of Sports Research. http://journals.lww.com/cjsportsmed/Abstract/2010/01000/A_Preliminary_Study_of_Subsymptom_Threshold.4.aspx
It may take one or two weeks before symptoms of a concussion lessen, and during that period the patient would rest and perhaps take pain killers. But about 10 percent of those who have suffered a concussion have symptoms that can last more than three weeks or lead to permanent brain damage, conditions which are called post-concussion syndrome.
The UB researchers tested its subjects by having them do a standard exercise program on a treadmill, to determine what level of activity exacerbated concussion symptoms.
With this program, post-concussion symptoms lessened and in some cases even disappeared, according to the UB study. The exercise helped improve the auto regulation of cerebral blood flow, researcher believe, which is impacted by the post-concussion syndrome.
Wisconsin Woman Killed After Hitting Truck
Jessica Lin, 34, was driving a 2001 Honda Accord at 5 a.m. on Interstate 90 when her car crossed a median and was hit by the oncoming truck.
The truck drive, Max Sharp, 54, of Preston, Ida., wasn’t hurt.
As we have said repeatedly, fully understanding what happened in this accident requires an inspection and investigation of the relative tread on the tires on Lin’s vehicle. If the tires on the front were newer than those on the back, this might be what caused the skid. For more information on potential liability of non-drivers in skidding accidents, see http://car-accident-rain.com
Former ‘Boston Legal’ Actor Killed in Rural Wisconsin Jeep Accident
http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/article_986b91e8-0f87-11df-a5d0-001cc4c002e0.html
The body of Mentell, 27, of Waukegan, Ill., was found near his wrecked 2005 Jeep Monday morning. The vehicle had fallen down an embankment off Highway 39 near Moscow Road north of Blanchardville, the paper reported.
Mentell, who wasn’t wearing a seat belt, was thrown out of his Jeep after it went off the highway, went down the embankment and hit two trees, authorities said.
Mentell had acquaintances in Madison, Wis. He was originally from Texas, later moved and went to high school in Waukegan, where he was a talented speed skater. Mentell graduated from Northern Illinois University in DeKalb. The school recently gave him an award as a distinguished graduate of its fine arts program.