article imageTexting driver guilty in death of 14-year-old California cyclist

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Nov 3, 2009 by  Salim Jiwa - 15 votes, 3 comments
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California motorist Jeffrey Woods was texting while driving. He was also under the influence of Vicodin and Xanax. He smashed across several lanes of traffic and hurled a cycling boy 200 feet into traffic lanes. Now, he is going to jail.
SANTA ANA, California - A text messaging motorist under the influence of Vicodin and Xanax was convicted of killing a 14-year-old boy on a bike.
Ironically, Jeffrey Francis Woods' last text message a minute before he smashed across several lanes of traffic and hurled a cycling boy 200 feet away was about more drugs.
A jury in Orange County found Woods, 22, of Huntington Beach, guilty on Monday of one felony count of vehicular manslaughter by unlawful act with gross negligence while intoxicated and one felony count of driving under the influence causing bodily injury.
Woods now faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in state prison at his sentencing Dec. 11.
Shortly after 2:00 p.m. on Aug. 29, 2007, Woods was driving erratically and following too close to other vehicles eastbound on Indianapolis Avenue in Huntington Beach.
Evidence showed Woods was under the influence of controlled substances, Vicodin and Xanax, and was sending text messages and distracted while driving.
Woods was sending text messages to friends attempting to illegally obtain Vicodin and Xanax.
The last text he sent was one minute before the crash and read, "Need bars?" "Bars" is a street term for Xanax.
Woods suddenly swerved in his pick-up truck over several lanes into oncoming traffic and crossed into the bike lane on the wrong side of the road, crashing into 14-year-old Daniel Oates.
The victim, who was riding his bicycle, was thrown over 200 feet and landed in a traffic lane. The defendant then crashed into a palm tree, drove through a wall, and came to a stop in the backyard of a nearby home.
Oates, who was wearing a helmet when Woods crashed into him, died from multiple blunt force injuries caused by the impact of the crash. The victim had been riding his bicycle with his best friend to pick up their class schedules in anticipation of the upcoming school year.
Oates, who was nicknamed "Oatie," was a junior lifeguard.
The defense claimed during trial that Woods suffered a seizure while driving and was unconscious at the time of the crash. The jury disbelieved the claim.
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