Over a year ago there was a
horrific accident on the roads of suburban Maryland .
Kevin Coffay and
several friends had left a party. Coffay was drunk, and he slammed a Toyota Corolla into a tree on the side of a Montgomery County road about 3 a.m.
Coffay crawled out
from behind an airbag and slipped into the woods. Police and tracking dogs
found him hours later and miles away, his blood-alcohol level still double the
legal limit for driving. Three of his friends were dead or dying.
The judicial process
played itself out in this way
Coffay
later pleaded guilty to three counts of vehicular manslaughter and one count of
failing to remain at the scene of a potentially fatal crash.
Prosecutors
asked for a 20-year sentence — relatively stiff by county standards but
justified, they said, because of his callous actions that night. The victims’
relatives endorsed the strategy.
But now Mr. Coffay is
portraying himself as the victim of a miscarriage of justice and wants
judicial relief
Coffay
— backed by family, friends and neighbors — will ask three judges to cut his
prison sentence, arguing that the
original 20-year sentence was more about revenge than justice.
See Mr. Coffay didn’t mean to kill his friends,
getting heavily intoxicated and driving them to their deaths was not
intentional so why should he be punished with a long jail term (it might not be
that long after all, he is eligible for parole after serving about six
yeas). And he really is a nice guy
Coffay’s
supporters described him as a sweet young man burdened by early hardships. His
father, racked with Alzheimer’s, no longer recognized him. His mother had just
completed treatment for breast cancer, helped by Kevin’s driving her to and
from chemotherapy appointments.
who in the eyes of his supporters was excused in
his actions because his life had some difficulties (just like everyone else’s
who doesn’t get drunk and kill three people and run away from the scene).
As for Mr. Coffay, he says he is being punished for
something he didn’t do.
“However,
I do think Judge Adams unfairly punished me to address and try to alter the
actions of what she described as a ‘culture of recklessness.’ It is not fair to
punish me for something I have nothing to do with. I did not create the culture
of teens around me and in no way should be held accountable for it.”
The reason this story requires commentary is that it
illustrates what appears to be an example some Americans are taking towards
their actions that result in injury and death.
The most prominent example of course is George Zimmerman, the man who
took a gun in his car to patrol his neighborhood, spotted Trayvon Martin and
confronted him resulting in Mr. Martin’s death at the hands of Mr.
Zimmerman.
In his eyes Mr. Zimmerman apparently believes he is
just as much a victim as Mr. Martin, much like Mr. Coffay seems to believe that
he is just as much a victim as the three people whose life he ended. Many people comment on and complain about the so-called 'culture wars' in America. A war against the culture that says the perpetrator is a victim is one culture war that should be taking place.
[Update: On Friday a three judge panel in Maryland took 12 years off the sentence of this individual who killed three people with his drunk driving. That's right, 12 years reduced for doing this
On May 15, 2011, Coffay crashed a Toyota into a tree off the side of Olney- Laytonsville Road. While his friends were dead or dying, he crawled out from under an airbag and ran into the woods. He was caught several hours later. He was originally sentenced Jan. 5.
What he really deserved was 12 years added to his sentence. He will be eligible for parole after only serving a couple of years. His victims are permanently dead. They get no extension for the time they were alive.]
[Update: On Friday a three judge panel in Maryland took 12 years off the sentence of this individual who killed three people with his drunk driving. That's right, 12 years reduced for doing this
On May 15, 2011, Coffay crashed a Toyota into a tree off the side of Olney- Laytonsville Road. While his friends were dead or dying, he crawled out from under an airbag and ran into the woods. He was caught several hours later. He was originally sentenced Jan. 5.
What he really deserved was 12 years added to his sentence. He will be eligible for parole after only serving a couple of years. His victims are permanently dead. They get no extension for the time they were alive.]
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