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Another plea agreement: Felony drug charges likely dismissed

The man involved in the county’s first fatal traffic crash of 2016 pleaded guilty to possession of heroin, cocaine, a generic form of Xanax and to reckless driving in Albemarle County Circuit Court June 21 as part of a plea agreement.

On March 15, 2016, Frayser “Kip” White IV allegedly crossed double-solid yellow lines in his Audi on Ivy Road and collided head-on with 81-year-old Carolyn Wayne, who was driving a Buick and died at the scene.

Though he was sentenced to 18 months and given credit for the several months he has already served, White—whose grandfather founded Virginia Oil and whose father-in-law is director Hugh Wilson—turned to the victim’s family and said, “My actual sentence is a life sentence of sorrow and pain.”

“No words can express my sorrow,” he said. “It’s a tragedy for which I take full responsibility. …I also ask what I can do, if anything, to help your family begin to heal.”

At the scene of the wreck, a witness allegedly saw White drop something behind a nearby bush before police arrived. Upon inspection, officers found it to be a foil packet of alprazolam, the generic form of Xanax, for which White did not have a prescription. The other drug charges—both felonies—stem from residue police say they found in a baggy in his car.

White was initially charged with his second DUI in five years, but prosecutors dropped the charge after finding no evidence he had been drinking. Blood tests revealed no alcohol or illegal drugs or narcotics in his system. For this reason, prosecutors also dismissed a pending involuntary manslaughter charge on July 29.

His attorney, John Zwerling, said White has been in rehabilitative counseling for the past 15 months. He has also attended Alcoholics Anonymous meetings five to seven days a week. Zwerling called this a “dedication to sobriety.”

As part of the plea agreement White entered, the court will take both felony drug charges under advisement for a five-year period, and they will be dropped if he follows all conditions, including abstaining from drug and alcohol use, taking random drug and alcohol tests and successfully completing five years of supervised probation. Additionally, his license has been suspended for the same amount of time.

Kimberly Rose, the victim’s oldest granddaughter, spoke at the hearing about her beloved “Mimi,” who played bridge weekly, walked her dog, Sweetie Pie, every day, taught her to crochet and was “tragically killed” by White.

“I cannot forgive Mr. White for what happened,” she said, and she asked that he get the help he needs to prevent a similar situation from happening again.

In recent history, a couple of other prominent white men have made similar headlines for car crashes on county roads that resulted in a dead elderly person and a short jail sentence.

When realtor Andrew Middleditch was charged with involuntary manslaughter for a 2015 Memorial Day drunk-driving crash that killed 78-year-old Lonnie Branham, he was sentenced to five years in prison, but only served 140 days.

In August 2014, Charlottesville author and world renowned journalist Donovan Webster killed 75-year-old Wayne Thomas White on Route 151 in a similar drunk-driving and involuntary manslaughter case. He pleaded guilty to the charges in February 2015 and was sentenced to two years in jail.

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In brief: Killer drug epidemic, movie money and more

Killer drug epidemic

More than 1,100 Virginians died in 2016 from the state’s opioid epidemic, with fentanyl, the drug that killed Prince, now racking up the most fatalities. And while the state hasn’t had much luck so far in slowing addiction, which often occurs after people are prescribed opioid-based meds for pain, it is a leader in fighting overdoses.

Virginia broke new ground by allowing anyone to obtain naloxone, the generic name for drugs like Narcan that are used for overdoses, without a prescription. On April 1, regulations went into effect that require opioid prescriptions above a certain dosage to include a script for naloxone.

Adapt Pharma, the manufacturer of nasal-spray Narcan, wants the drug easily available at an affordable price. “We’re never going to turn the death rate down until naloxone is available everywhere,” says spokesperson Thom Duddy. Since April 1, for every 45 opioid prescriptions in Virginia, 1 naloxone script is written. Nationally, 570 opioid prescriptions are written for every 1 naloxone script

Conflicting advice in case of an overdose

According to the Virginia Board of Medicine:

  1. Call 911
  2. Then administer naloxone

According to Adapt Pharma:

  1. Administer naloxone
  2. Then call 911

By the numbers

By Alpha Pharma, Virginia Department of Health

  • 7: Fatal opioid overdoses in Charlottesville/Albemarle in 2016
  • $75: Cost of two bottles of Narcan
  • Around $10: Cost with typical insurance
  • Free (for those insured under the ACA or Medicaid)

Early checkout

High Meadows Inn, the baby-blue B&B with green shutters in Scottsville, is headed to the auction block May 24 after current owner Cynthia Bruce defaulted on its $737,000 mortgage. Selling, crowdfunding and even trying to give the inn away in an ill-fated essay contest couldn’t save it.

Not a Hollywood ending

Confiscated movie money. Courtesy Albemarle County Police Department
Confiscated movie money. Courtesy Albemarle County Police Department

County police say 19-year-old Yahmil Deyshon Payne and two juveniles have been arrested for using fake money, which clearly says “For Motion Picture Use Only,” in local businesses and in exchange for electronics. Keep your eyes peeled—police think some of the debunked dollars are still circulating.

Media moves

Nelson native and Newsplex GM Jay Barton is departing for new Gray Television purchase, WCAX in Burlington, Vermont. Former sales manager Eric Krebs is the new GM. And over at the Daily Progress, features writer David Maurer has retired after nearly 30 years.

Quote of the Week:

Mayor Mike Signer. Staff photoAnother profile in courage here—anonymous trolls lecturing elected officials about cowardice. Yawn. —Mayor Mike Signer responds on Twitter after denouncing torch-carying white nationalists in Lee Park

Rescheduled—again

For the third time, Frayser White IV’s pre-trial motions hearing has been continued. White is charged with possession of heroin, cocaine and alprazolam, and reckless driving in the first county traffic fatality of 2016, when he allegedly collided head-on on Ivy Road with 81-year-old Carolyn Wayne, who died at the scene. A new date for his trial, originally scheduled for last Halloween, has not been set.

Don’t drink the water

Chris Greene Lake, Albemarle’s most popular recreational park and once a supplemental water supply, was officially designated not a public water reservoir.

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Driver in fatal accident faces four new charges

After Frayser White IV crashed into 81-year-old Caroline Wayne’s automobile on March 15 on Ivy Road, she died and he was charged with his second DWI. That charge was dropped and a grand jury indicted him on four new counts August 1.

According to search warrants, police noted that White’s car had a lingering wine aroma, and they discovered the prescription drug Suboxone, which is used to treat opioid addiction, the residue of suspected illegal narcotics and containers filled with suspected alcoholic beverages.

White told police that he had not been drinking, but he did admit to purchasing a bottle of wine earlier in the day. A witness at the crash spotted White placing an unknown item behind a bush following his accident, according to NBC29. Upon investigation, officers discovered a small stash of generic Xanax plopped inside the bush, and pills were also recovered near the scene of the crash.

Tests of White’s blood alcohol content showed that he had not been drinking, according to a motion to dismiss the charge of driving while intoxicated for the second time in five years. The motion also noted there was not enough evidence to charge him with involuntary manslaughter while driving under the influence.

White is now charged with four counts including two felony counts of possession of heroin and possession of cocaine, and misdemeanor charges of possession of Xanax and reckless driving.

According to Charlottesville court records, White already has one conviction of reckless driving under his belt along with six speeding tickets in Albemarle, as well as a driving under the influence conviction in December 2014, and charges for improper driving, improper passing and driving without a license.