LA County prosecutors are now determining whether to file charges
against Caitlyn Jenner, who was involved in a deadly chain-reaction
crash on Pacific Coast Highway in February.
Los Angeles County sheriff’s detectives on Tuesday presented the case to
prosecutors that could lead to a misdemeanor manslaughter charge.
Sheriff’s Det. Richard Curry told The Times last week
that Jenner was driving at an unsafe speed Feb. 7 when her Cadillac
Escalade rear-ended Kim Howe’s Lexus, sending it into oncoming traffic
and ultimately leading to the 69-year-old driver’s death.
Jenner was pulling an off-road vehicle on a trailer and had to suddenly
slow as vehicles in front stopped. Curry said Jenner was complying with
the speed limit but moving too fast for the road conditions that day.
Howe died at the scene after Jenner’s SUV hit her car and sent it into
the path of a Hummer coming in the opposite direction.
Typically, a single misdemeanor manslaughter charge could carry a
sentence of a year in jail, though legal experts say a jail term would
be unlikely.
The deadly crash near Corral
Canyon Road came before Jenner announced her gender transition. At the
time, she was Bruce Jenner, best known as the father figure of the
Kardashian family and 1976 Olympic decathlon gold medal winner.
Jenner has called the crash a “devastating tragedy,” saying, “I cannot
pretend to imagine what this family is going through at this time. I am
praying for them.”
LA Times
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