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Speeding Police Cruiser Kills Two Innocent Teens

November 18, 2009 Other 1 Comment

On the morning of June 13th in Milford CT, two police officers in their own cruisers were returning from an assistance call in a neighboring town. This video shows the first police car traveling between 66 and 72mph in a 40mph zone, being passed by another police car on the right, which was traveling at over 90mph. Both cruisers are traveling without their signals and sirens on. What happens next is just awful.

When the accident occurred, the involved police cruiser was traveling at 94mph. The aftermath is that two teenagers in the car died instantly. The officer involved in the accident was charged with second-degree manslaughter. Below is the article from Connecticut Post with all the details. I would love the hears YOUR thoughts on this video and the article in the comment section below. Thanks.

MILFORD — A video of the June 13 crash that killed two Orange teens shows a Milford police cruiser traveling at a high rate of speed as it struck the young couple’s car under a flashing traffic signal.

The video released Tuesday is from the dashboard camera of another Milford cruiser and shows Officer Jason Anderson’s car pass on the right and plow into a 2008 Mazda carrying Ashlie Krakowski and David Servin. The Mazda was struck as it made a left turn from the Boston Post Road onto Dogwood Road at 2:13 a.m., sparks and small flames shooting from underneath the vehicle.

Officer Rick Pisani at one point was traveling at more than 70 mph, according to the dashboard camera, as he and Anderson returned to Milford after a mutual aid call in West Haven. Pisani was going about 65 mph when Anderson shot past him on the right; the speed limit on that stretch of the Boston Post Road is 40 mph.

The two-minute video segment was released in response to a state Freedom of Information request by the Connecticut Post. It covers the nearly half-mile stretch between the Utopia 77 Lounge in West Haven, from where the officers left, and the crash site. An earlier video segment, also screened Tuesday by Chief Keith Mello, shows Pisani leaving the scene of the West Haven mutual aid call while Anderson’s cruiser is still there.

Anderson has been charged by State Police with two counts of second-degree manslaughter in the teens’ deaths. He will be arraigned Nov. 24 in

Derby Superior Court and has been suspended with pay.

Pisani is now the subject of an internal investigation into his speed that morning, Mello said. The 39-year-old probationary officer remains on duty, working the night shift.

Servin’s mother, Susan, watched the video Tuesday morning in the victim advocate’s office at Milford Superior Court, accompanied by her attorney, Bart Halloran.

Attorney John Wynne viewed the video at the same time, at the request of Ken Krakowski, Ashlie’s father.

“It was horrific, frankly,” Halloran said. “It was shocking to see that type of behavior. The cruiser taking the video is going 66 to 72 mph with no explicable reason.

“We’d have concerns about him driving a car,” the Servins’ attorney said of Pisani. Both officers were “playing fast and loose with people’s lives, to do that kind of speed at any time of day.”

Mello confirmed that neither Milford cruiser had its light bar or siren on, and that neither officer was being dispatched to another call at the time of the crash.

State law requires police officers traveling without lights and sirens, and not dispatched on a call, to obey prevailing speed limits, the chief said.

Wynne said that he was told by state police that Anderson was traveling at 94 mph just before the impact. “That is 138 feet per second, which doesn’t leave much reaction time for another driver,” he said.

The video does not give a true impression of Anderson’s speed because it is being taken from a vehicle that is also traveling very fast, Krakowski’s lawyer said.

The lawyers said in separate interviews that they have not had access to the vehicles involved and still do not know which of the two teens were driving at the time of the crash.

“Even if my client was the passenger, we don’t intend to file suit against the driver,” Halloran said. “We will be going after the party who is responsible for the collision.”

Although police found a small amount of marijuana in the couple’s car, a toxicology report found no traces of the drug in their blood, Halloran said.

Wynne said that he has not been provided a copy of the arrest warrant affidavit for Jaycen Munro, a Milford resident state police have charged with serving alcohol to minors on the night of the crash.

Krakowski’s lawyer said he doesn’t know if the crash victims attended the party Munro gave, or whether either of them consumed any alcohol.

The affidavit was not available late Tuesday afternoon from Milford Superior Court, where Munro is to be arraigned on Nov. 25.

The cruiser that Pisani was driving on June 13 is one of only two in the Milford department’s 25-car patrol fleet equipped with a dashboard camera, Mello said. The department plans to use a $79,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to equip seven more patrol cars with cameras, he said.

The camera, manufactured by I-COP, constantly captures data, Capt. Tracy Mooney said, but only records it when a cruiser’s lights and siren are activated.

Mello said that the camera has the ability to go back 60 seconds from the moment the lights and siren are switched on and store video from that point.

Pisani switched on his vehicle’s emergency devices when he saw the crash happen in front of him, which preserved the moment of impact on video.

Source: Connecticut Post and Teen Driving Blog

Currently there is "1 comment" on this Article:

  1. Jim H. says:

    This morning I saw a clip of the accident on TV, I did’nt get the full story until I checked online. Now that I know the full story, it looks like there’s hell to pay. Personaly, I do not have it in for police officers, but behavior like this by police officers is totally unacceptable. Even more so than from the ordinary citizen. I belive police often feel they can get away with behavior like this because for the most part ” they can”. Unfortunately it takes a tragedy like this to bring this type of crap to light. Although one officer was not involved in the actual collision he was involved in inappropriate behavior that led to the crash. Both officers should be punninshed to the full extent of the law. My heart goes out to the families of the two peolple who were lost by the actions of persons who abused thier privileges that were given them by the peolpe they are out there to protect.
    God Bless those lost souls. Jim H.

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