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No charges for driver in downtown Houston crosswalk death
No charges for driver in downtown Houston crosswalk death

Axios

time13-02-2025

  • Axios

No charges for driver in downtown Houston crosswalk death

Harris County grand jurors have declined to indict a pickup driver who fatally struck a 64-year-old woman in a downtown Houston crosswalk last year, leaving her family in "total shock." Catch up quick: Patricia Martin was crossing at the intersection of Milam and Walker streets in January 2024 when the pickup driver turned and hit her, police said. The driver, Emmanuel Megrelis, failed to yield right of way to Martin as he rounded the corner, police determined. Martin's family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against him last year as prosecutors mulled criminal charges. Driving the news: Harris County prosecutors presented the case to a grand jury Jan. 30 seeking a state-jail felony charge against Megrelis under the Lisa Torry Smith Act, a 2021 Texas law named after a woman killed in a crosswalk that created a criminal offense for drivers in such instances. The panel issued a no bill — meaning it declined to press charges — under the statue, according to Harris County court records. Prosecutors the next day asked a different grand jury to indict Megrelis on a state-jail felony charge of criminally negligent homicide, but that panel also declined. Friction point: The results left Martin's family doubting District Attorney Sean Teare's office. Other Texas prosecutors, including in neighboring Fort Bend County and Austin's Travis County, have successfully secured indictments under the Lisa Torry Smith Act. What they're saying:"We're not actually sure what the district attorney's office presented to the grand jury," Zach Martin, the victim's son, told Axios. "We really doubt their ability to prosecute cases involving other victims if they're not able to achieve even an indictment in this case." The other side: Teare's office did not comment on the grand juries' decisions, citing the secrecy of the proceedings. But spokesperson Courtney Fischer said "prosecutors inform grand juries of all applicable laws when presenting a case." Flashback: Victim's families and advocates have pressured Harris County prosecutors to pursue charges under the relatively new law. In January, Axios reported that Teare said he would not pursue charges under the Lisa Torry Smith Act in crosswalk crashes involving death, opting to pursue other charges. He also told Houston Chronicle subscribers in a Q&A last month that while the law is a "tool in the toolbelt," he wanted "more Court of Criminal Appeals opinions" on the statute "before we go forward with it." Martin's family met with prosecutors last week but left without many answers, Martin said. The bottom line:"We feel defeated," Martin said. "(With) all the effort we put in it in the past year and everything, we really thought it would lead to at least an indictment. We just don't know what to do." What's next: The wrongful death lawsuit against Megrelis is still ongoing, records show, and a trial date has not yet been set.

How Harris County DA parses crosswalk fatality laws
How Harris County DA parses crosswalk fatality laws

Axios

time30-01-2025

  • Axios

How Harris County DA parses crosswalk fatality laws

New Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare told Axios he doesn't plan on filing charges under a relatively new law aimed at protecting pedestrians in crosswalks, choosing instead to pursue a different statute against drivers. Why it matters: Teare's policy, which he also employed as a prosecutor under his predecessor, has so far resulted in zero drivers facing charges for killing pedestrians in Harris County crosswalks, per an Axios analysis of 21 crash reports and court documents. Catch up quick: Texas lawmakers in 2021 passed the Lisa Torry Smith Act, named after a woman killed in a crosswalk in 2017. It created a criminal offense for drivers in such instances. If the collision causes "serious bodily injury" — which under Texas law includes death — the charge is a state jail felony punishable by up to two years' confinement, with a possible fine up to $10,000. State of play: In an interview with Axios in December, Teare said the 2021 law "does have utility on the serious bodily injury cases." But in cases where the victim dies, Teare prefers to charge drivers with criminally negligent homicide, also a state jail felony with an identical punishment range as the Lisa Torry Smith law. Zoom in: Harris County grand jurors have twice declined to press charges of criminally negligent homicide against drivers accused by police of failing to yield right-of-way and killing someone in a crosswalk since the Lisa Torry Smith Act took effect in September 2021, according to an Axios review. Six more cases are still under review and have yet to be presented to a Harris County grand jury. They include the January 2024 death of 64-year-old Patricia Martin in downtown and the death of 2-year-old Emmanuel Molina, who died while crossing the street with his grandmother in December. Though prosecutors' grand jury presentations are secretive, Teare told Axios his office would seek criminally negligent homicide charges in those remaining cases. What they're saying:"I don't understand why we would ever even envision filing this [charge] when there's a fatality when we have the criminally negligent homicide statute," Teare said. "In the Lisa Torry Smith [law], it just deals with bodily injury and serious bodily injury. It doesn't even have a provision for fatalities." Teare said one reason he's preferential to pursuing criminally negligent homicide charges is that prosecutors don't have to prove that the victim was "violating the law themselves," he said. Charges under the Lisa Torry Smith Act are contingent on the pedestrian having been lawfully in the crosswalk when they were struck. They also can't have suddenly darted out in front of the driver, according to the statute. Reality check: Prosecutors in other Texas counties, including neighboring Fort Bend and Austin's Travis County, have charged and obtained at least one conviction in a half-dozen crosswalk death cases under the Lisa Torry Smith law. Fort Bend County District Attorney Brian Middleton, whose office is currently prosecuting two crosswalk death cases under the new statute, said a the circumstances of a crash can be easily discernible from an immediate but thorough investigation by police. "Each [crash] is judged on a case-by-case basis, and [with] every investigation, the outcome is fact-specific," Middleton tells Axios, adding that instances where a pedestrian in a crosswalk jumps in front of a car are rare. The bottom line: Families of people killed in crosswalks last year are waiting for Teare's next move in their cases.

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