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Not guilty: Trash truck driver acquitted in fatal train crash

Garbage truck driver Dana Naylor was found not guilty for his involvement in a crash that made headlines last year, when an Amtrak train carrying GOP congressmen smashed into his truck in Crozet.

The crash killed Naylor’s friend and coworker, Christopher Foley, who was one of two passengers. The other, Dennis Eddy, was severely injured.

Naylor, 31, was charged with involuntary manslaughter. The prosecution contended that he was criminally negligent and alleged he drove his truck around the downed gates at the Lanetown Road crossing, and that statements he made to police and medical responders in the immediate aftermath—that he was trying to beat the train, and that he had ruined his life and killed his friend—proved guilt.

But defense attorney William Tanner said prosecutors didn’t have sufficient evidence to prove how Naylor got on the tracks. Tanner told jurors they should believe the driver’s original statements that he saw the crossing’s warning lights flashing, tried to cross, and got caught in between the gates that came down around him.

Albemarle County Circuit Court Judge Cheryl Higgins struck an additional DUI maiming charge after hearing expert testimony from a forensic toxicologist, who said the level of THC, the psychoactive component in marijuana, in one’s blood does not correlate to the level of impairment.

The commonwealth initially intended to argue that Naylor was impaired during the crash because a blood test found marijuana in his bloodstream. A cop, claiming he smelled beer on Naylor, obtained a search warrant, but the test turned up no traces of alcohol.

Outside of the presence of the jury, prosecutor Juan Vega asked Dr. Jayne Thatcher, from the Virginia Department of Forensic Science, to explain a 2006 study by a behavioral oncologist that related THC levels to impairment. But his plan to link the two backfired when Thatcher said she couldn’t rely on the THC level alone. And the prosecution didn’t have any other evidence from witnesses who observed Naylor at the time of the accident.

Commonwealth’s Attorney Robert Tracci had this explanation: “You can imagine fewer buzzkills greater than a trainwreck.” Had Judge Higgins allowed the charge to move forward, he said he would have presented evidence to the jury that investigators found weed in a tube of Carmex lip balm, which was inside Naylor’s lunchbox in the cab of the truck. He also said there was a “marijuana pipe” found right next to the vehicle on-scene.

Outside the courthouse, after the jury deliberated for several hours to reach the not guilty verdict on the remaining involuntary manslaughter charge, reporters questioned Tracci about whether he thought he would have been able to get a conviction if he’d been able to introduce the additional evidence.

“I think the jury wasn’t able to consider the totality of circumstances supporting the commonwealth’s charging decision,” he said. “They made their decision. We respect that outcome.”

In most states, including Virginia, it’s illegal to drive with a blood alcohol content over 0.08 percent, but states vary when it comes to THC levels and impairment. Currently, Virginia does not have an established limit, and Tracci told reporters he hopes the General Assembly will reconsider establishing one.

In Colorado, you could get a DUI if a blood test reveals five nanograms of THC in your system. Naylor’s test revealed nearly seven nanograms. But because THC can linger in one’s system for weeks, Naylor’s THC levels do not prove he was high at the time.

Over the course of the three-day trial, jurors heard from nearly 30 witnesses, all but one called by the prosecution.

Greg Gooden, who oversees railroad signal maintenance at that crossing in Crozet, said before a train passes, lights and bells will blink and ring for approximately four or five seconds, and then it takes about 12 or 14 seconds for the gates to descend. They must be fully horizontal for at least five seconds before the train crosses, and they’re “not very hard” to drive through in the event of an emergency, he said.

Gooden added that there haven’t been any reported malfunctions at the Lanetown crossing, as far as he’s aware.

Sole defense witness Mandy Snow contradicted Gooden’s testimony. The lifelong Crozet resident said she’s lived in the immediate vicinity of the tracks for two years, crosses them four or five times per day, and that it’s not unusual for the gates to malfunction.

“I’ve also noticed that they don’t come down in time,” she said, adding that she’ll often drive over the crossing and then hear a train barrel past her within seconds. “In my opinion, there’s not enough warning.”

In Tracci’s closing argument, he said her testimony wasn’t reliable, and that Naylor acted with total “reckless disregard for human life” when he decided to try to beat the 60mph train that day in January 2018.

Tanner encouraged the jury to use their common sense in his closing, and asked, “Why would he endanger his crew? …Why in the world would he do that to save about a minute?”

Then Tracci closed out the trial with his own question: “If this isn’t a crime and this isn’t criminal negligence, I ask you again, what is?”

It turned out to not be an easy question to answer. After the verdict, an anonymous juror told reporters the panel’s initial vote found Naylor guilty of involuntary manslaughter by 10 to two.

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UPDATED: Middleditch enters Alford plea, will serve less than half a year in jail

 

On the second day of his jury trial, prominent realtor Andrew Middleditch, 56, pleaded guilty to his second DUI offense and entered an unexpected Alford plea before the closing statements related to his involuntary manslaughter charge, which came from a Memorial Day car crash that killed 78-year-old Lonnie Branham.

When the judge asked Middleditch if he made the decision to enter the plea on his own, he did not immediately answer yes. He also asked the judge to explain the meaning of an Alford plea after he entered it.

An Alford plea is not an admission of guilt, but rather an acknowledgment that a jury has enough evidence for a conviction.

Once sentenced to five years in prison, with all but 90 days suspended for the involuntary manslaughter charge, and 12 months for the second drunk driving offense, with but 40 days suspended, Middleditch stood and faced the family of the victim.

“I want you to know something from the bottom of my heart,” he said, his voice shaking. “I really wanted to go to the funeral and they told me I couldn’t.” He added that he is “very, very sorry,” and that he was suffering addictions that he has since gotten under control. He also said he still feels like he didn’t cause the accident.

Outside of the courtroom, teary-eyed family and friends gathered around Leigh Middleditch, the defendant’s father who has served on UVA’s Board of Visitors, and Betty Middleditch, the defendant’s mother. “He was so brave,” one said to the parents, and another said, “I’m so proud.”

“Mr. Middleditch still feels like he didn’t do anything wrong,” defense attorney Fran Lawrence said outside the courthouse, adding that his client chose to take the Alford plea because it was difficult to tell what the jury was thinking. He said his client is committed to sobriety, his family and his role in the community.

“Somebody who’s never been in serious trouble has difficulty admitting to himself that he might have done something wrong,” says C-VILLE legal expert Dave Heilberg about why Middleditch might have chosen to take his case to trial. “Sometimes you have to get a jury trial started before a defendant is ready to hear what the evidence against him might be.”

Heilberg says the Alford plea could have been used as a device to keep from having liability admitted.

A wrongful death lawsuit filed against Middleditch by Branham’s family has been settled, according to the family’s attorney, Greg Webb.
Middleditch will report to the Albemarle Charlottesville Regional Jail on May 20 to serve his time.

Read about the first day of his trial here.

In August 2014, Charlottesville author and world renowned journalist Donovan Webster, also 56 at the time, killed Wayne Thomas White Sr., a 75-year-old from Waynesboro, on Route 151 in a similar drunk driving and involuntary manslaughter case that was also prosecuted by Quatrara.

Webster pleaded guilty to the charges in February 2015 and was sentenced to two years in jail.

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Expert witnesses testify, Middleditch trial to resume tomorrow morning

 

The high-end realtor charged with involuntary manslaughter and his second drunk driving offense for killing an elderly driver in a Memorial Day car crash last year stands trial in Albemarle Circuit Court.

On April 26, a 12-person jury made of nine women and three men was selected to hear the case against Andrew Blackwell Middleditch, 56, who investigators say had double the legal limit of alcohol in his system while driving his GMC Yukon on Barracks Road on the morning of May 25, 2015. He was attempting to turn left when 78-year-old driver Lonnie Wycliffe Branham tried to pass him on the left side and the vehicles collided, sending Branham’s 1990 Chevy Lumina into a ditch.

Branham was pronounced dead at the scene.

In opening statements, prosecutor Matthew Quatrara told the jury he has “rock solid and indisputable” evidence to convict Middleditch, and said because the real estate agent’s attorney, Fran Lawrence, does not dispute the defendant was intoxicated behind the wheel, this is a one-issue case: Was Middleditch the cause of the crash?

Jonathan Hickory, an Albemarle County police officer who specialized in fatal crash reconstruction at the time, testified that Middleditch’s front left turn signal bulb showed signs of “hot shock,” which signifies that his signal was activated at the time of the crash.

Lawrence believes Middleditch’s turn signal, along with his alleged slowing speed, would have given Branham ample time to register that a person driving in front of him was about to make a left turn.

In a dash cam video from Officer Greg Anastopoulos’ patrol car on the morning of the incident, Middleditch can be heard speaking with slurred speech. During his sobriety tests, he struggles to count backwards and refuses to say the alphabet, saying he’s dyslexic. In the video, he says he believes Branham was trying to pass him.

“He knew he was being passed,” the prosecutor said. “We believe that is the core of this case.”

The jury will meet again tomorrow to hear the rest of the case and decide on a verdict.

 
Middleditch also faces a wrongful death lawsuit in which Branham’s family is asking for $1.5 million in compensatory damages and $350,000 in punitive damages.

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‘Almost instantaneous’: Realtor’s DUI manslaughter charges go to grand jury

 

High-end real estate agent Andrew Middleditch’s charges for driving under the influence for the second time and for involuntary manslaughter stemming from a Memorial Day crash that killed 78-year-old Lonnie Branham were certified to the grand jury in a November 19 preliminary hearing.

Witness Victor Schiller was driving behind Middleditch’s silver SUV and Lonnie Branham’s white Chevy Lumina headed east around 8am May 25 when Branham, in a legal passing zone, pulled out to go around Middleditch as Middleditch made a left turn. The vehicles collided and Branham’s car flipped over.

In an e-mail to police the day after the crash, Schiller said he saw Middleditch’s left turn signal and brake lights go on and the white car speed up and move to pass the SUV. In court, he said the events were “pretty much simultaneous.”

Defense attorney Fran Lawrence hammered on the difference in sequence of events between the e-mail and Schiller’s testimony. “This whole thing unfolded in less than three seconds,” said Schiller.

He said he was going approximately 45mph and it didn’t seem like the other cars were “going too fast.” Middleditch had just started his turn and “was barely into the left lane” when the two cars struck, testified Schiller. He agreed with Lawrence that the Lumina driver could have seen Middleditch’s signal and brake lights, and said he saw no brake lights on the Lumina. “He could not move back into his lane because he was committed,” said Schiller. “It was a second. It was a long second.”

Five seconds before the crash, Middleditch was going between 17mph and 19mph, said Albemarle County Police Officer Jonathan Hickory, who examined the crash data recorder in Middleditch’s 2013 GMC Yukon. A half second before the crash, Middleditch hit the brakes, said the officer.

Middleditch kept his head and eyes downcast during much of the hearing. When Hickory showed photos of the crash scene with Branham’s body in a white sheet, Middleditch closed his eyes.

Officer Greg Anastopoulos noticed “an odor of alcohol” when he spoke to Middleditch at 8:24am, he told the court. “He was speaking at a very low volume” and his speech was “slurred at times,” said Anastopoulos.

Middleditch told him he was a realtor and was looking at property, going around 35mph, when another vehicle came up at what he estimated was 70mph and clipped the front of his SUV, testified Anastopoulos.

In a video of the roadside interview and field sobriety test, Middleditch told the officer he’d had a beer or two the night before before 9pm, then said he’d had two or three beers that night.

“I’m completely fine,” said Middleditch on the video. Moments later, he said, “This has never happened before in my life, seriously. I’m upset about this person.” Middleditch also said three times that he was “freaking out” over the situation.

He performed two field sobriety tests, but refused to do an alphabet test. “I’m not doing the alphabet,” he said. “I’m dyslexic. I have a hard time finding numbers in the phone book.”

When Anastopoulos took him to the Albemarle Charlottesville Regional Jail and tested his blood alcohol level 35 to 40 minutes later, Middleditch blew .18 BAC, more than double the legal limit of .08.

Judge Robert Downer found enough probable cause to certify the charges to the grand jury, which meets December 7.

And that’s not the only legal woe facing Middleditch. Branham’s family filed a wrongful death lawsuit in August.