• @neatchee
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    1517 hours ago

    And did that kid get off with a “oopsies!”? No? Then how is that related to this thread?

    • @DrunkEngineerOP
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      56 minutes ago

      If we are talking about the rolling coal kid, he did get off with an oopsie.

      • @neatchee
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        152 minutes ago

        Would love to see a citation on this. Not familiar with the specifics and would love to know more but I had trouble finding this specific story

        • @DrunkEngineerOP
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          125 minutes ago

          https://archive.ph/3tLtL#selection-1499.0-1499.550

          More than a year passed with no news about the crash or charges against the driver. Then, in the winter of 2022, the Waller County District Attorney quietly closed the case without a public announcement. Because the defendant had been handled as a juvenile, the court proceedings and final verdict were sealed. Had the case been dropped? Was there a settlement?

          The boy would soon graduate from Waller High School, walking across a stage in front of a large crowd. The victims wondered what level of remorse he felt in the wake of the crash, and whether he might go on to impart some measure of good on the world?

          “I don’t think they ever could prove it was intentional,” DeToto said, getting into the legal semantics of recklessness versus the desire to do harm. “I’m not defending rolling coal on anybody. But that’s probably not going to be a Class A assault where you could go to jail. It’s going to be a Class C. It’s just like a ticket. Is it offensive? Yes. But it’s a different level than intentionally hitting a group of bikers.”