It is interesting to watch him defend his daughter in this tragedy.
Prosecutors had hoped to examine the crash data recorder, or “black box,” in Shelton’s car to retrieve information, such as her speed and braking at the time of impact, but attorney Mark T. Sandoval, representing Shelton’s mother in a lawsuit against the truck driver, went to the storage lot and removed the box before investigators executed a search warrant.
TOTAL LIAR(lawyer) commiting fraud by removing evidence and
blalk box data can be changed.
Houston PING
The SUV swerved across two lanes of traffic and hit the cargo truck Lance Bennett was driving, according to police.
http://www.txcn.com/sharedcontent/dws/txcn/houston/stories/khou061023_ac_swfwydeath.6840aff3.html
In this state if you are DUI and get rear-ended while stopped at a red light, you are at fault. The DUI (.24 BAC!) is the prime issue.
Guilty!
It only took the jury less than an hour to reach a verdict. >P? Shelton's father was comforting his daughter just before the jury came. She began to sob just before they handed down the guilty verdict.
"The jury obviously did the right thing in assuring this young woman go home with her mom and dad and get back in school," said Shelton's attorney Mac Seacrest.
The Judge ordered her to start her jail sentence five days before Christmas.
Shelton was accused of driving drunk. Her blood alcohol content was reportedly more than three times the legal limit. Investigators say she also had trace amounts of marijuana in her system though it wasn't enough to contribute to her intoxication the night of the accident.
Shelton's boyfriend, Matthew McNiece, 19, was killed as the result of a freeway crash that involved Shelton and the driver of a box truck, Lance Bennett. Attorneys for Shelton argued last year's crash was caused by Bennett.
Prosecutors said today's verdict contained a message.
"It says if you drink and drive, people are going to hold you accountable, that they have had enough of it," said district attorney Craig Feazel.
Shelton had faced anywhere from two years probation to up to 20 years in prison.