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Ohio Firefighter Sentenced to 9 Months Over Response Accident

A volunteer firefighter from Portage, Ohio has been sentenced to 9 months in prison for causing an accident in 2010 that killed a 24 year old man and seriously injured his girlfriend.

Firefighter Timothy Johnson, now 43, of the Portage Fire District, was responding to a mutual aid structure fire on July 16, 2010 when his personally owned vehicle collided with a car driven by Olivia Duty. Duty’s boyfriend, Ian Huffman, 24, was killed in the crash. Police estimated Johnson’s speed at between 96-98 miles per hour just before the collision. Here is our previous coverage of the accident.

Johnson was originally charged with aggravated vehicular homicide and aggravated vehicular assault. Following a mistrial where a prosecutor committed misconduct by failing to disclose evidence to the defense, Johnson pled guilty to one count negligent vehicular homicide and attempted negligent homicide, a second-degree misdemeanor.

Besides the 9 months in prison, Johnson will lose his driver’s license for 3 years.

More on the story.

Posted in Criminal Law, Disciplinary Action, Manslaughter, Negligence, Volunteers

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Virginia EMT Spared In Fatal Ambulance Accident

A Virginia EMT who was involved in a fatal ambulance accident in May has been found guilty of improper driving, but has avoided several more serious charges.

Justin Kidd, 25, was driving a Campbell County ambulance on May 3, 2012 when it collided with a vehicle driven by a retired Lynchburg firefighter, Dean Anders, 69. Andres died at the scene. The accident happened at an intersection controlled by a traffic light, and allegedly the ambulance was not using its red lights and siren while transporting a patient to the hospital.

Kidd was charged with reckless driving, and Anders’ family wanted him charged with involuntary manslaughter. However, the witnesses differed about who ran the red light. In the end, the judge found Kidd guilty only of improper driving and fined him $25. The case was decided this week in Lynchburg.WSET.com – ABC13

Posted in Apparatus, Criminal Law

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Responding Volunteer Firefighter in Missouri Ticketed for Reckless Driving

A volunteer firefighter in Missouri who was responding to an emergency in his personal vehicle with lights and siren on, has been charged with reckless driving. Matt Ousley from the New Bloomfield Fire Protection District was cited on  Saturday, November 5, 2011 by the Holt Summit Police Department.

 Ousley contends that he was driving responsibly, although he admits to have been driving at 10 mph over the prescribed speed limit, and passing vehicles that had yielded the right of way. He and his fire chief, Dean Powell, insist he was operating within the legal limits prescribed for an emergency vehicle.

However, Assistant Police Chief Bryan Reid contends that the state law that grants certain privileges to emergency vehicles, does not apply to volunteer firefighters responding in their personally owned vehicles. He initially told reporters: “A first responder vehicle is not considered a full emergency vehicle…. By statute it is not exempt.”

Reporters from the local TV Station KMOU subsequently provided Reid with copies of the applicable statutes, indicating that a properly permitted POV displaying blue lights and equipped with a siren was an emergency vehicle. Here are copies of the applicable statutes

http://www.moga.mo.gov/statutes/C300-399/3040000022.HTM

http://www.moga.mo.gov/statutes/C300-399/3070000175.HTM

Not surprisingly, Reid then said even if Ousley’s POV was an emergency vehicle it was still operating recklessly. Interesting retort…. Perhaps he reconsidered the reasoning behind the issuance of the original ticket… realizing the hypocritical implications of saying a firefighter who mistakenly operates a POV as an emergency vehicle is ”reckless”…. I won’t go there…. but think about it …

Incidentally, if Ousley is cleared, do you suppose the arresting officer will be charged with interfering with a firefighter in the performance of his duties?  IMHO – if police officers who improperly arrest firefighters in the performance of their duties are duly held responsible for their poor judgment, many of these unfortunate cases would disappear.

AND… to be brutally honest – reckless driving among all firefighters, career, volunteer, in apparatus or in POVs – cannot and should not be ignored or covered up. With that in mind we are following the vehicular homicide trial in Ohio of Portage Fire District firefighter Timothy Johnson for the July 16, 2010 death of Ian Huffman. Johnson was responding at the time and allegedly was traveling at speeds in the 98 mph range at the time of the accident.

More on the Ousley case.

More on the Johnson case.

Posted in Apparatus, Criminal Law, Manslaughter, Police-Fire, Volunteers

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Virginia Ambulance Driver Charged with Reckless Driving

A Virginia ambulance driver was charged with reckless driving earlier this month when he used his ambulance to stop a fleeing vehicle involved in a police chase.

 

Posted in Criminal Law

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