PDA

View Full Version : Man sentenced to 30 years in FHP trooper's death


DaveInDaytona
12-02-2005, 11:24 PM
Man sentenced to 30 years in FHP trooper's death
Jay Stapleton

Staff Writer

Dec. 2, 2005

DAYTONA BEACH - There were no winners in the courtroom Friday when Donald Williams was sentenced to 30 years in prison for causing the death of a state trooper during a chase in 2004, a judge said.
More than 25 uniformed Florida Highway Patrol troopers filled half of Circuit Judge R. Michael Hutcheson's courtroom to support the family of Trooper Darryl Haywood, killed Oct. 2, 2004, when his cruiser, traveling at more than 100 mph, crashed into a car and then a tree on Interstate-4 while trying to stop Williams on a speeding motorcycle.

"Two people made a mistake that day," Tampa defense lawyer Leon Jones said of the speed the men were traveling. "Now, both families are hurting."

Haywood was killed when the tire on his Camaro cruiser blew out at 130 mph while chasing the motorcycle that was reported speeding and racing. His son was sworn as a trooper after his death.

During the sentencing, testimony heard from friends and loved ones of both men showed similarities they shared, including a commitment to work and family.

"No matter what sentence I impose," Hutcheson said before making his decision, "there will be no winner or loser." Williams, 39, a father of two from Seffner who had been ticketed six times in eight years, had no criminal record before. He was convicted in a jury trial Oct. 18 of aggravated manslaughter, vehicular homicide and fleeing or attempting to elude an officer causing death.

"You have taken away my life's partner, my children's father," widow Linda Haywood said. "Had you stopped as you were required to under the law, you would have realized that Trooper Haywood's interest in you was solely motivated by his obligation to enforce traffic laws and protect motorists of the state of Florida, including yourself .¤.¤. our hearts are broken and nothing will ever heal them."

Williams spoke in court for the first time Friday. He said he'd wanted to write a letter of apology to the Haywood family but was advised against it. Speaking slowly, Williams said he was deeply sorry.

"Something happened that day that tore two families apart," he said. "It was a bad thing that happened to two good people."

Haywood of Palm Coast was 49 and also a father of two. He was a New York City police detective who had been promoted to provide security for diplomats and presidents.

Williams was stopped in St. Johns County later that same day, when his motorcycle tire went flat. He confessed that he had accelerated to 100 mph when he saw the trooper on the side of the interstate. Throughout the trial, Williams denied that he ever knew the trooper was after him, in spite of witnesses who said they saw him look back as he sped by.

"I hope one day we will be able to put this behind us," Williams said, "and communicate like people."

As in the trial, Tampa defense lawyer Leon Jones said Haywood's death was caused not by Williams' actions, but by a choice the trooper made to aggressivly chase the motorcycle at high speed.

Haywood's daughter, Erica Haywood, 23, took offense to Jones' position that her father died because of his "choice" to continue pursuing Williams. "That was his job." she said. "It was not his choice."

Haywood was described as a proud yet humble trooper and dedicated family man. "Darryl had a passion for helping people," FHP Maj. Cyrus Brown said. "He intended to make the world a better place."

Likewise, Williams was portrayed by tearful family members as a veteran of the Gulf War, a generous friend and supportive father who remains a best friend of his ex-wife. In an emotional plea for leniency, Williams' teenage daughter, Shantavia Williams, said her father was on his way to see her near Jacksonville when Haywood died. "I feel like it's my fault," she said.

"I know if he could, he would take all this back," said Williams' niece, Amanda Thompson, 16.

Haywood's family members said later they felt the sentence was fair.

"As a Christian, I've already forgiven him," Linda Haywood said.

The deep sense of loss for both families was illuminated after Williams was led away to serve his time. After the television cameras had moved on, Linda Haywood walked over and offered Williams' 16-year-old daughter a hug. For a long moment, they held each other tight.

Berzerker
12-03-2005, 06:40 PM
so long SUCKA ! no remorse from any of the LEOs in the court room....now he goes to St Johns to face additional charges....he will probably plea out to concurrent sentences and the story comes to a close folks....

Shorgasm
12-03-2005, 08:09 PM
I'm gonna throw this over to the LS2 board and get some feedback..I understand your point of view Berserker but maybe I am missing something here....He was speeding.He knew the FHP was in pursuit.At what point did he cause the wreck and death of the trooper?..am I missing something?...wasn't there a tire failure?...I'm not 100% on my info but 30 yrs for failure to stop?Surely I am missing something here.

daytonajoker
12-03-2005, 10:22 PM
Lesson to be learned here: "Don't look back"

Zeb
12-04-2005, 09:13 AM
I posted this way back when this all first happened. Ya know what! I still feel the same way!

"Don't defend this piece of crap's actions. His decision to ride that fast cost another man his LIFE! Yes we all ride at illegal speeds now and then. No that does not make it o.k. to do it. I am friends/riding buddies with many of the members on here. If I or any other member here was involved in this type of incedent, I would hope that they would be as pissed at me as I would be at them. When your actions (be it drinking and driving,playing with a hand gun,or riding a motorcycle as fast as we all do) kills or hurts YOU,then it is your problem. When it hurts or kills another person you are responsible for that death. Yes the trooper made the decision to pusue the bike. He also makes that decision to pursue a drunk driver our confront an armed individual. If he dies doing that, who is responsible? The suspect is. This jackass should not be treated any differant. Z" (posted feb-05)

Zeb
12-04-2005, 09:16 AM
Lesson to be learned here: "Don't look back" Now theres a real grown up answer.

Shorgasm
12-04-2005, 10:36 AM
I took this to anothe very large board and got 100% agreement on the sentencing being WAY to severe.

Here's my point again..I think the guy s a douchebag for sure.he needs to be punished without doubt....BUT..how was he directly invovled in the Troopers death?...he didn't cause a an accident the Trooper couldn't avoid.He didn't run the Trooper off the road.Hell for that matter he wasn't even near him when the accident occured.This friggin ididot is gonna spend the majority of his life in jail.Holy crap man...way to make a example of someone..

I mean take away his license forever...make him pay costs...make him do whatever but holy shit 30yrs is crazy.Not to mention what will happen to this guy from ST John's court system.you might as well execute him.His life is over....I have to be missing some of the story here as to why he got 30yrs...

Zeb
12-04-2005, 06:38 PM
His life is over....I have to be missing some of the story here as to why he got 30yrs...

"His life is over"? He had more of a chance to think what his actions could cause than the trooper did. Maybe 30 years is a bit stiff,but.....it is a hell of a lot better than a slap on the wrist and no drivers license for life. The troopers family will still be dealing with this in 30 years when this scum bag gets out.


He made a decision to ride like a friggin' idiot on a major state highway and when he looked back and saw the officer, he made the decision to keep doing so. That few minutes of lapse in good judgement cost a man (a father,a son,a brother) his LIFE! Now this fool gets to sit in a cell and think over and over "what if I had just stopped" Justice was served. You don't like the out come? I'll bet the next jackass will stop. Z

daytonajoker
12-04-2005, 06:58 PM
It's human nature to lay blame on someone else for your "screw-ups"....Maybe the tire manufacturer should have also been prosecuted or the guy in the Saab or the tree....In retrospect, how many of you "LEO's" out there would have made the same decision as Haywood (chase a 'Busa going 125mph the other direction)? The suspect hadn't robbed a bank,murdered his wife,taken a hostage and there was nothing in the BOLO for Haywood to think that...It's tragic, stupid and unjustifiable...that we can all agree upon...These days I pull over.

Shorgasm
12-04-2005, 08:32 PM
ZEB, Please don't get bent outta shape man.I agree with you the guy is a moron to the first order but he didn't cause the wreck.You can't just leave that out because the Trooper died.30yrs plus whatever else is thrown at him will end him up in jail till he is a very old man.

There are shitloads of asshole criminals that don't get this type of sentence for FAR worse/intentional felony's....You are absolutley right the poor family is gonna have to deal with this forvever and ever.There is no question about that.The problem we have here is who to blame for what...I don't really know but I would bet my last dollar that other FHP's would have responded in a different fashion to a bike going 125mph the other way....99% chance the bike would be gone by the time he truned around.At that type of speed you are OUT OF SIGHT in seconds.

I will not blame the Trooper for what he did BUT his action/choice was to pursue a blurr.A horrible chain of events happened after that serve no purpose in me rehashing.it brings tears to my eyes to think about it.He was doing his job and made a mistake.

It still does not make the rider soley responsible to bear the punishment.There was anothe vehicle involved.That in itself should take wieght in his sentence.It just does not seem in order to put this idiot in jail for the rest of his life.This guy is gonna have a terrible life from that point forward.No two ways about it.He gets to live with the fact a LEO died trying to pursue him cause he was a moron....if you run a redlight and a old lady gets run over and killed because a car tried to aviod you and hit her.You're not gonna get 30yrs.Even though you ACTUALLY caused the accident.

One again, I am not a fan of this jackass rider...I simply disagree with the punishment/sentece he got served even at this early point in time.

Zeb
12-05-2005, 12:46 PM
:cry: 'Nuff said......

super3
12-05-2005, 09:32 PM
OK now it's my turn, and yes Zeb will still be my brother when I'm done writing this.I have a couple of points. First like it or not,for what ever reason you want to point to,sportbikes and the people who ride them,young,old male,female, have become law enforcments outlaws of the 21st century. Those of us old enough to remember (I'm dating myself now) will tell you that in the 60's motorcyclist were all looked upon as trouble (Ever see Easy Rider) yes all Harley riders were Hells Angles or worse and if you had a teenage daughter she better not be seeing any guy with a motorcycle. Sportbike riders are the focus of much overzealous law enforcement, just stop somewhere for gas and a bottle of water with a couple of your buddies during bike week and see how long it takes for the cops to show up and tell you to move on. Point is yes this guy did a stupid thing and yes it is a sad story for all envolved but above all this guy is being held up as an example for all you speed freak heathan sportbike riders to see!!
Point number two, I hold a CDL drivers licence, I drive for a living.15 or 20 years ago when they first started the national CDL any tickets you got driving a personal vehicle did not count against your CDL.Then a few years ago the law changed and points from personal vehicle tickets did go against your CDL record, too many tickets in your car or a severe speeding on your motorcycle and you get your CDL suspended. Now in the state of Florida, after Oct. 05, if you have a CDL you can no longer opt for safe driving school to make points disappear, you have to take the points.So now at my age I have to be honest given the right set of circumstances, facing the possibility of getting caught and loosing my licence, my way of making a living,my house, my kids(my ex wife would have a field day if I couldn't provide for my kids) I may very well make a run for it myself. Maybe we all could be that Busa rider under the right circumstances. Both men made decisions while under the influance of testosteron, now every one from them and there families to insurance companies to the Good Year tire company(if you don't see a lawsuit coming there you re blind) to sportbike riders every where will all be paying the price for a very long time. My heart goes out to all those envolved.

chiung
12-06-2005, 12:14 AM
Webster's Dictionary entry for TRAGEDY

This is surely it - everyone came out a loser.

The rider is being made an example of, but he is not the first and will not be the last. Our justice system, as fair as it is relative to the rest of the world, still is run by people (lawyers and leos) and will therefore appear at times to be vengeful if the "victim" is one of them. They circled the wagons.

dbsuperbiker
12-11-2005, 10:29 AM
Unfortunate events for sure. Running from arrest is worse than speeding and ultimately was called murder.
However, the trooper used very poor judgement as well, by chasing (through innocent motorists) someone he had no chance of catching, instead of calling ahead, as prudence would dictate.
The speeders flight was a serious crime......but not murder.