Acopia Home Loans
Apr 212013
 

iStockPhoto/Thinkstock(FRESNO, Calif.) — The judge who sentenced a Fresno, Calif., man to jail for his role in a deadly drunk driving accident, defied the wishes of the victim’s family who had asked that the driver not receive jail time.

Judge Alan Simpson sentenced 25-year-old Brian Cappelluti to a year in jail after Cappelluti pleaded guilty to gross vehicular manslaughter and DUI charges on Thursday.

In 2011, Cappelluti was arrested after driving drunk with a blood alcohol level of .21 and crashing into a traffic light. The accident took the life of passenger 23-year-old J.W. Pardini, a close friend of Cappelluti’s.

Before Cappelluti’s sentencing, the Pardini family wrote a letter to the judge asking that Cappelluti not be given jail time.

“JW is gone forever. Brian has to live with the thought of this accident every day for the rest of his life,” the family wrote in a statement. “We suggest that probation for Brian is the proper corrective action.”

Another passenger in the car, Marion Walker, was severely injured during the crash. But she also spoke out for Cappelluti and asked the judge for leniency in his sentencing.

“All of us will pay for this accident for the rest of our lives,” Walker said. “We all understood what could happen and it did. I ask you not to take away my surviving support.”

While Simpson’s sentence of one year in jail is more than the defense wanted, it is far less than the five years in prison the prosecutors had asked for.

“I think the outcome was fair and just and everybody can feel that justice was done,” defense attorney Rick Berman told ABC News affiliate KFSN-TV in Fresno after the sentencing.

An earlier plea bargain fell apart in February after Cappelluti refused a deal that could have resulted in his spending six years in prison. During that hearing, Judge Houry Sanderson chided Cappelluti for relying on the kindness of Pardini’s family.

“If he was not related at all to these victims at all, total strangers, I am very sure that the position of these families would have been very different,” Sanderson said.

Cappelluti could be released from jail after eight months.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

Feb 192013
 

Brand X Pictures/Thinkstock(MIAMI) — Karlie Tomica is a college student who’s known as the Miami Beach “party princess,” but police say her blood alcohol content was three times over the legal limit when she drove her boyfriend’s car, hit a well-known chef and fled the scene.

The chef, 49-year-old Stefano Riccioletti, was killed in the Jan. 28 accident, which happened in the early morning on Collins Avenue, a popular Miami Beach thoroughfare.  Riccioletti, who was married with three children, was the executive chef at Terraza at Shore Club, an upscale restaurant.

Police initially charged Tomica, 20, with leaving the scene of an accident, but added the DUI manslaughter charge when they got the results of her blood alcohol test.  She faces up to 30 years in prison if she’s convicted.

Tomica was apparently leaving her bartending job at the popular Nikki Beach nightclub when she allegedly hit Riccioletti.  He was reportedly thrown by the impact.  A witness called 911 and followed Tomica, and police arrested her.

Riccioletti’s family members have filed lawsuits against Tomica and Nikki Beach, arguing the club is responsible for allowing Tomica to leave intoxicated.

Riccoletti’s wife, Patrizia Pesce, said her first thought upon learning of her husband’s death was her children.

“How am I going to tell them that they have lost their Dad?” she said.

The family’s attorney, Jose Baez, added: “Stefano is not here, and it doesn’t matter if it is a car or a gun, he was killed.  And the persons or person responsible for that need to be held accountable.”

Tomica’s attorney, Mark Shapiro, said his client is a young girl who made a tragic mistake.

“She’s just a regular person who finds herself in this horrible situation,” he said.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

Jan 282013
 

Paralegal Melissa Personius seen here. (ABC NEWS)(TAMPA BAY, Fla.) — A civil defamation case between two of the biggest radio names in the Tampa Bay, Fla., area took an odd turn last week when an attorney representing one of the DJs ended up behind bars for an alleged DUI, in what his legal team calls a setup.

Charles Campbell, the lead attorney representing radio personality Todd “MJ” Schnitt in his case against Bubba “The Love Sponge” Clem, was arrested Wednesday night outside Malio’s Prime Steakhouse in Tampa.  At the restaurant and bar, he had met a paralegal named Melissa Personius, who works for Clem’s legal team.

John Ellis, a member of Schnitt’s legal team, says that Personius tricked Campbell into getting arrested.

“She lied to Mr. Campbell, or me, when we asked her where she worked,” he said.  “She bought him drinks.  She specifically, we believe, asked him to move her car.”

It’s unclear whether Campbell has entered a plea.

Police testified in court Friday that a member of Clem’s defense team called them to have Campbell arrested for DUI.  Schnitt’s attorneys have asked for a mistrial on the grounds that the jury might have been influenced by the publicity of Campbell’s arrest.

“I don’t expect him to declare a mistrial,” legal expert Kevin Hayslett told ABC News.  “I expect the show to go on, if you will.  But obviously the criminal arrest of lead council for the plaintiff has a dramatic effect.”

Schnitt’s lawyers say Clem’s attorneys could have gotten a legal advantage because Campbell left his briefcase with important documents in the paralegal’s car.

Personius said in court Friday that she had not opened the briefcase while it was in her possession.  She invoked her right to remain silent several times while on the stand, including when she was asked whether she was sent to the bar by her firm.

Clem’s attorney says there is no need for a mistrial in the case that centers around allegedly offensive and defamatory comments Clem made about Schnitt and his wife.

“I ask for a retraction of that, because he [Schnitt's attorney] knows he has no evidence to suggest that my law firm or I have any involvement in this,” he said.

The trial was set to enter its third week on Monday.

The judge decided on Friday that more time was needed for research before ruling on the mistrial request.  While leaving the court on Friday, Clem expressed his disappointment in the turn of events.

“It’s like a South Park episode,” he said.  “Quite frankly, I’m getting a little tired of it.”

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

Jan 092013
 

iStockphoto/Thinkstock(WASHINGTON) — The Supreme Court will hear a case on Wednesday about a Missouri man who says his constitutional rights were violated when he was pulled over after drinking beer at a bar called Slinger’s and forced to take a blood test without a warrant.

The man, Tyler G. McNeely, was stopped in October 2010 by Cpl. Mark Winder of the Missouri State Highway Patrol for speeding. Winder immediately noticed signs of intoxication including bloodshot eyes, slurred speech and a strong odor of alcohol.

McNeely admitted that he had consumed beer, but he would not consent to an alcohol breath test or a blood test after he was arrested for driving while intoxicated.

Winder, without getting a warrant, decided to take McNeely to the hospital for a blood test to secure evidence of intoxication.

That nonconsensual blood test — considered a “search” in legalese — is at issue in front of the Supreme Court, which is expected to clarify when and under what circumstances a warrantless search can occur in such cases.

In court papers, lawyers for Missouri say that Winder didn’t attempt to obtain a search warrant prior to the blood test in part because, “Obtaining a search warrant in the middle of the night in Cape Girardeau County involves a delay, on average, of approximately two hours.”

Winder was concerned about the rate of elimination of alcohol in the bloodstream, which diminishes over time.

It turns out McNeely’s blood alcohol level was 0.154 percent, well above the legal limit of 0.08 percent.  In court, McNeely moved to suppress the evidence against him, saying his constitutional rights against unreasonable search and seizure were violated.

A trial court ruled in favor of McNeely, finding that while there are exceptions to obtaining a warrant in such circumstances, including endangerment of life, and the destruction of evidence, McNeely’s case fell outside of those exceptions.  The court said that the natural dissipation of alcohol in the bloodstream alone was not a sufficient factor to justify a warrantless blood draw in a routine stop.

The case eventually landed at the Missouri Supreme Court, which affirmed the trial court’s judgment.

Now, the Supreme Court will hear an appeal to the Missouri ruling.  At issue is a 1966 Supreme Court case, Schmerber v. California.  In that case — involving an alcohol related arrest — the Court provided some exceptions to the warrant requirement for the taking of a blood sample.

The holding was limited to certain “special facts” that might have led the officer in that case to believe he was faced with an emergency situation in which the delay in obtaining a warrant could be interpreted as the destruction of evidence.  Lower courts have interpreted Schmerber differently.

Attorneys for Cape Girardeau County, Mo., argue in court papers that “allowing a police officer to obtain a warrantless blood test from a drunk driver strikes a favorable balance between legitimate law enforcement interests and the privacy interests of the individual.”

They say: “Although the dissipation rate will vary from person to person, one simple fact cannot be refuted — during a drunk driving investigation the best and most probative evidence of the crime is being lost at a significant rate.”

They say motorists have a diminished expectation of privacy, the officer had probable cause to arrest McNeely, and the “search” was conducted in a reasonable manner.

Thirty-two states have filed a brief supporting Missouri and urging the Supreme Court to adopt a rule allowing warrantless blood draws in every drunk-driving investigation.

“The States’ interest in fairly and accurately determining guilt or innocence for this serious crime outweighs an individuals’ interest in avoiding the slight intrusion involved in halting that evidence destruction by obtaining a blood sample,” they write in a friend-of-the-court brief.

The American Civil Liberties Union is representing McNeely in the case and it argues that the Supreme Court should not adopt a general rule without consideration for specific circumstances in every case.

“The issue in this case is whether the police can compel a warrantless blood test in every DWI case,” writes Steven R. Shapiro of the ACLU in court papers.

Shapiro notes that different states have different procedures for obtaining search warrants and that it has become common for some states to permit telephonic warrant applications.

He argues that whether a warrantless blood test is unreasonable should be determined based on the totality of the circumstances that include: whether there was anything that delayed the officers at the arrest scene, whether there was more than one officer at the scene, how far police have to travel to a hospital, and how long it typically takes to obtain a warrant in that jurisdiction.

Shapiro writes that Missouri “overstates the need for warrantless blood tests, and understates the affront to personal privacy and dignity when the States override an individual’s objection and sticks a needle in his arm.”

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

Jan 042013
 

Thinkstock/Getty Images(SALT LAKE CITY) — A class-action lawsuit has been filed against a former Utah Highway Patrol trooper and her superiors alleging that she filed false DUI charges during her career.

The department fired Lisa Steed in November for alleged misconduct related to her duties.

Attorney Michael Studebaker, who is one of the lawyers leading the class-action lawsuit, says he has been contacted by at least 40 people claiming Steed wrongfully arrested them on DUI or drug charges.

“Culture of corruption.  The stories are just rampant,” said Studebaker, who filed the lawsuit on Dec. 14 in District Court in Salt Lake County.

Lawyers have yet to determine exactly how much the plaintiffs will seek in monetary damages.

One of the alleged victims was Michael Choate, who says Steed pulled him over for speeding with his wife in the car.

“She said she clocked me at 73.  I was going about 50, 52 at most,” Choate said.

Choate was arrested and charged with DUI, but the charge was reduced to having an open container of alcohol in the car after a blood test showed he was not drunk.  Choate says he was forced to pay $3,000 in fines to get his car back.

Choate was also upset that his wife was forced to find her own way home after his arrest.

“They dropped her off at a Burger King,” he said.  “She didn’t have any money, she didn’t have her cellphone with her.  She had to borrow a quarter from a lady to make a phone call.”

Steed and her attorney have not responded to requests for comment.  Utah Highway Patrol says it cannot comment on pending litigation.

Steed is under investigation by the FBI.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio