Limo operator in upstate 2018 crash that killed 20 avoids prison

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Limo operator in upstate 2018 crash that killed 20 avoids prison​



By
Jesse O’Neill


September 2, 2021 8:26pm
Updated





Nauman Hussain, who is charged with 20 counts of second degree manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide in a 2018 limousine crash, walks into a makeshift courtroom to accommodate more people at the Schoharie High School gymnasium Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021, in Schoharie, N.Y.
Nauman Hussain pleaded guilty to 20 counts of criminally negligent homicide for the deadly 2018 limo crash. AP Photo/Hans Pennink







A former upstate limo operator avoided prison time in connection with the catastrophic 2018 crash that left 20 birthday revelers dead, after authorities found the disaster was a direct result of vehicle neglect and terrible brakes.
Nauman Hussain, 31, the former operator of Prestige Limousine, pled guilty Thursday to 20 counts of criminally negligent homicide in connection with the Schoharie, NY, tragedy. He was sentenced to five years probation and 1,000 hours of community service.
At the sentencing — which was held in a high school gymnasium to accommodate spectators under COVID-19 measures — family and friends of the victims castigated the former limousine driver.
“My son, my baby boy, was killed in a limo while trying to be safe,” said Beth Muldoon, the mother of Adam Jackson, 34, who died alongside his wife, Abigail King Jackson.
Upstate limo operator in deadly crash will avoid jail time.The 2018 limo crash killed 20 people. Courtesty CBS6 News Albany, NY
The couple, who left behind two young children, had hopped in the stretch limo with the large group to avoid drinking and driving.
“Every day I try to wrap my head around this impossible situation,” said Sheila McGarvey, whose 30-year-old son Shane McGowan and his wife, Erin, were killed.
Hussain had been charged with 20 counts each of criminally negligent homicide and second-degree manslaughter, but copped a deal to avoid a long and emotional trial. Inspectors had served Hussain with “multiple notices of violations” before the disaster, prosecutors said.
Nauman HussainHussain was sentenced to five years probation and 1,000 hours of community service.G.N.Miller/NYPost
The limo, rented by Amsterdam resident Axel Steenburg to celebrate his wife Amy’s 30th birthday with family and friends in Cooperstown, careened down a hill at a speed of 100 mph after the driver lost control. The passengers were not wearing seatbelts, which were under the benches of the limo and invisible to them.
Seventeen revelers were killed, along with the driver and two bystanders. It was the deadliest US transportation accident in a decade, and inspired a 2020 limo safety bill in Albany.
With Post wires
 

Limo operator has ‘personal responsibility’ for NY crash that killed 20: prosecutors​



By
Jorge Fitz-Gibbon


May 8, 2023 4:57pm
Updated











A former upstate limo operator who rented out the ride involved in the horrific 2018 crash that killed 20 people bears “personal responsibility” for the disaster, prosecutors said during opening arguments at his trial Monday.
Nauman Hussain, 33, the former operator of Prestige Limousine, faces 20 counts of criminally negligent homicide in the Oct. 6, 2018 catastrophe that killed 17 revelers on their way to a surprise birthday party in Cooperstown, as well as the driver and two bystanders who were outside a Schohaire convenience store.
“This case is about personal responsibility,” Fred Rench, a special prosecutor assigned to the case, told jurors in Schoharie County Court, according to a report by the Albany Times-Union.
“The evidence will show [that] Mr. Hussain was made aware of his responsibility again and again and again in the months leading up to the crash,” Rench said. “Mr. Hussain’s choices led to the accident that caused the deaths of 20 people on Oct. 6, 2018.”
Police said the rented stretch limo, a modified 2001 Ford Excursion, careened down a hill at up to 100 mph, sped through an intersection and smashed into a car outside the Apple Barrel County Store & Cafe, striking the two bystanders and killing everyone in the vehicle.

Nauman Hussain, 33, at right.
Nauman Hussain, 33, at right, is on trial for the Oct. 6, 2018, limousine crash that killed 20. Hussain, the former operator for Prestige Limousine, is facing 20 counts of criminally negligent homicide in the case. His trial began Monday. Hans Pennink
The 2001 Ford Excursion limousine involved in the deadly 2018 crash.
The modified 2001 Ford Excursion stretch limo involved in the deadly Oct. 6, 2018, upstate crash that killed 20 people had faulty brakes and had not been properly inspected in as long as two years, authorities said after the wreck. NTSB
None of the passengers were wearing seatbelts at the time. An independent review ordered up by State Police and the Schoharie County District Attorney’s Office determined that the Prestige limo had faulty brakes and had not undergone a state safety inspection for as long as two years before the incident.


Hussain’s lawyer told jurors Monday that a local repair shop and state Department of Transportation inspectors — not his client — should be held responsible for the deadly crash.


Attorney Lee Kindlon said the 31-foot limo should have been inspected and was even involved in a crash in the Mavis auto repair shop parking lot in June 2017 that a DOT investigator had been aware of.


“The accident was caused by the fraud and failure of Mavis to fix the brakes,” Kindlon said. “They know that they should be sitting here instead of Nauman Hussain.”

Nauman Hussain, 33, at left, is charged in the 2018 limo crash that killed 20.
Nauman Hussain, 33, operator of Prestige Limousine, is facing 20 counts of criminally negligent homicide in the Oct. 6, 2018, upstate crash that left 20 people dead, including 17 people headed to a surprise birthday party.AP
Hussain, the son of limo company owner Shahed Hussain, a former FBI informant, was charged with criminally negligent homicide in the tragic wreck and later released on a $150,000 bond.


The younger Hussain cut a plea deal with prosecutors in 2021 that allowed him to dodge prison — but the agreement was nixed by a judge and upheld by an appellate court, opening the way for this week’s trial in at the Schoharie County Courthouse in Saratoga County.


Jury selection in the emotionally-charged case dragged on for five days, as prosecutors and defense lawyers weeded through 200 potential jurors before selecting the final panel of 16.

Violations found in 2001 Ford Excursion limo involved in 2018 crash.
The modified 2001 Ford Excursion stretch limo involved in the Oct. 6, 2018 upstate crash.NTSB
Judge Peter Lynch.
Judge Peter Lynch is presiding over the trial.Hans Pennink
The tumult continued on Monday morning, when one of the jurors was dismissed before opening arguments, according to the Times-Union.


The 2018 tragedy was the deadliest US transportation crash in at least a decade.





It inspired a package of measures approved by lawmakers in Albany that boosted safety requirements for stretch limousine operators.


The trial is expected to last five weeks.
 
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