COURT RECORDS: SPEED, BOOZE, MARIJUANA ALL FACTORS IN FATAL CRASH

St. Albans: Court records in the case of Ryan Wooster, the man accused of causing a fatal crash that killed Cassie Viens in September, points to speed and substances as the leading factors of the crash.

Wooster
Wooster

According to Corporal Keith Cote’s affidavit, Wooster admitted to drinking the night of the crash.

A blood test in the case indicated that the 20-year-old Wooster had 0.061% BAC some time after the crash. That’s under the State’s 0.08%BAC limit for a person over 21, but drivers under 21 are held to a zero tolerance according to state law.

Police also found at least two empty containers of beer in Wooster’s mangled vehicle. Drunk driving accidents are happening far too often when they are 100% preventable. They can be life changing events and sometimes accidents occur through no fault of your own. So if you have been in an accident, it may be a good idea to contact someone like this personal injury lawyer smyrna to see if you can get compensation. If Wooster wasn’t drunk that night then this accident may never have happened.

The report also indicates that Wooster had 3.6ng/ml of THC, the psychoactive component of marijuana, in his system at the time of the crash.

In Vermont, there is no level, legally, safe to drive with THC in a driver’s system.

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As for speed, the speed limit on Bronson Road where the crash occurred was 40 miles per hour.

The officer that investigated the accident, Trooper James Vooris, indicated that the vehicle would have stopped in 66-100 feet if it were traveling at 40 miles per hour.

At 60 miles per hour, the stopping distance of the vehicle would have been 150-219 feet, according to Vooris.

Police said that Wooster’s vehicle traveled more than 500 feet from the time the skid marks started until the car came to rest in the middle of Bronson Road.

It should be noted through, these calculations would be for a vehicle with tires that were “skidding.” In this case, police indicated that Wooster’s vehicle was not skidding the entire way.

Cassandra Viens
Cassandra Viens

“Based on the calculations… it is clear a vehicle traveling at or near the posted speed limit of 40mph would need a far less distance to stop with 100 percent breaking efficiency,” said Trooper Vooris.

Vooris said that the vehicle went airborne and rolled several times before landing in the road. It’s because of drivers like these that it’s a necessity to have some of the best car insurance in California – they also offer coverage in other states as well.

When police arrived, they saw Viens, who died in the crash, pinned in the passenger seat of the car by the roof of the vehicle.

The report by the Medical Examiner indicates that Viens died of blunt force trama and brain injuries.

Wooster told police that he and Viens were fighting in the minutes leading up to the crash, according to records.

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