Featured Story

Grand jury finds limo driver at fault, indicts him for criminally negligent homicide

 

COURTESY PHOTO | Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota
COURTESY PHOTO | Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota at a press conference Wednesday.

The limousine driver involved in last summer’s fatal crash in Cutchogue has been indicted by a grand jury on four counts of criminally negligent homicide, Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota announced Wednesday.

Carlos Pino, 58, of Old Bethpage is expected to be arraigned on the felonies and other charges before Judge Fernando Camacho in 1st District Court in Central Islip Wednesday afternoon.

Witnesses who testified before the special grand jury, including a driver and three passengers waiting behind the limousine in an eastbound turning lane on Route 48, stated that Mr. Pino attempted to make a U-turn at the Depot Lane intersection despite having a “limited sight line,” Mr. Spota said. A westbound Jeep Liberty attempting to make a left-hand turn off Route 48 to head south on Depot Lane obstructed Mr. Pino’s view, he said. Despite this, Mr. Pino attempted to make the U-turn without ever coming to a full stop, the DA added.

As Steven Romeo, 55, of Peconic approached the westbound intersection in his 2005 Dodge Dakota, the turning limousine blocked his lane of travel, Mr. Spota said.

While Mr. Romeo still faces a grand jury indictment on two counts of misdemeanor driving while intoxicated, the criminal liability for the crash falls on Mr. Pino.

“A perfectly sober Steven Romeo could not avoid this crash; an intoxicated Steven Romeo could not avoid this crash,” Mr. Spota said. “It was simply unavoidable from Romeo’s perspective.”

COURTESY PHOTOS | Left: Amy Grabina, Lauren Baruch, Stephanie Belli (top) and Brittney Schulman.
COURTESY PHOTOS | Left: Amy Grabina, Lauren Baruch, Stephanie Belli (top) and Brittney Schulman.

The July 18 crash took the lives of Brittney Schulman, 23, of Smithtown; Lauren Baruch, 24, of Smithtown; Stephanie
Belli, 23, of Kings Park; and Amy Grabina, 23, of Commack.

Injured but surviving the crash were four additional passengers: Joelle DiMonte, 25, of Elwood; Melissa Crai, 23, of Scarsdale, N.Y.; Alicia Arundel, 24, of Setauket; and Olga Lipets, 24, of Brooklyn.

The eight women had hired Mr. Pino, an employee of Ultimate Class Limousine in Hicksville, for a Saturday afternoon of visits to tasting spots on the North Fork. The limo had just left nearby Vineyard 48 and the women were headed home when Mr. Pino attempted the ill-fated turn.

“The Jeep Liberty completely blocked the limo driver’s view of the oncoming traffic in the main travel lanes,” the DA said. “Mr. Pino failed to take any precaution or action to  make sure he could safely enter the westbound travel lanes and he continued to make the U-turn.”

Mr. Romeo, who told investigators he had been drinking beer at home in the hours before the crash, was charged with DWI the following day. He pleaded not guilty and has been out on bail ever since.

Prosecutors had asked the grand jury to consider one count of second-degree vehicular manslaughter and one count of criminally negligent homicide against Mr. Romeo, but after reviewing all the evidence in the case and listening to more than six months of testimony the panel declined to indict him on those charges, Mr. Spota said.

Instead, Mr. Romeo faces a grand jury indictment on two counts of misdemeanor driving while intoxicated and an infraction for driving while ability impaired. He will also be arraigned in county court Wednesday afternoon, the DA said.

A blood test taken one hour and 40 minutes after the crash revealed that Mr. Romeo’s blood alcohol was 0.066 — under the legal limit of 0.08 — Mr. Spota announced days later. However, he maintained that Mr. Romeo was “most likely” over the legal limit at the time of the crash.

On Wednesday, Mr. Spota shared many details of the crash investigation for the first time. He said the inquiry revealed that the two drivers could not have seen each other until the truck, traveling at more than 55 mph, was within 200 feet of the intersection and said Mr. Pino told investigators on the evening of the crash that he never saw Mr. Romeo’s truck.

Mr. Spota said that, given the time he had to react to the sight of the limousine, Mr. Romeo could not have applied the brakes until he was about 70 feet from the limo. Expert testimony revealed that at the speed he was traveling, Mr. Romeo would have needed more than 260 feet to come to a stop, the DA added.

To hold Mr. Romeo criminally responsible for the crash, a link between his drinking and the cause of the crash would have to be made, Mr. Spota said.

“Romeo can be held criminally responsible for driving while intoxicated but he cannot be held criminally responsible for the crash,” he added. “The person who is criminally responsible for the crash is Carlos Pino and Carlos Pino alone.”

In addition to criminally negligent homicide, Mr. Pino faces four misdemeanor assault charges related to injuries sustained by the four surviving passengers in his limo; a misdemeanor reckless driving charge; one count of failing to file a required report upon an accident with the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles, also a misdemeanor; and infractions for turning at an intersection, failure to yield the right of way and failing to stay in a designated lane, the DA said.

The grand jury will remain in place to hear additional testimony on limo and road safety, Mr. Spota said.

The crash has led to several civil court proceedings, including at least two lawsuits filed by surviving victims of the crash naming Mr. Romeo as a defendant. Mr. Pino also filed a notice of claim against Southold Town blaming a defective intersection for the crash.

[email protected]