Crime & Safety

Prosecutors Drop Intoxication Charges Against Driver Involved in Fatal SR-52 Crash

Santana High graduate Michael Sebastian Johnson, 18, now faces felony charges of engaging in a speed contest resulting in injuries and reckless driving.

Prosecutors have dropped intoxication allegations against an that resulted in the in a teenage friend's car, after a toxicology report showing no marijuana in the defendant's system.

Michael Sebastian Johnson, a graduate of , now faces two counts of gross vehicular manslaughter and other charges in connection with the crash that took the lives of 16-year-old Jayli Campbell and 18-year-old Anthony Foreman.

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Johnson -- who was originally charged with gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated -- also faces felony charges of engaging in a speed contest resulting in injuries and reckless driving, along with possession of marijuana while driving, an infraction.

He was arraigned on the amended charges Thursday and pleaded not guilty.

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Johnson -- who remains free on $50,000 bail -- will be back in court June 14 for a readiness conference and Sept. 11 for trial.

At an earlier hearing, Deputy District Attorney Kristen Spieler alleged the defendant was racing and zigzagging in and out of traffic just before his friend's car crashed near Convoy Street on April 4 about 11:45 p.m. as they headed home from a bonfire at La Jolla Shores.

Spieler said Johnson -- who stayed at the scene after the crash -- appeared to be under the influence, and a small amount of marijuana was found in his car.

Six hours after the accident, Johnson showed symptoms of impairment and had a green substance on his tongue consistent with marijuana use, the prosecutor alleged during a preliminary hearing in April. An initial lab report indicated that Johnson could have had marijuana in his system, according to court testimony.

But defense attorney Russell Babcock argued there was no evidence that Johnson smoked any marijuana the night of the accident, and he questioned whether his client could be held legally responsible for the victims' deaths.

"This was not a race," Babcock told the judge.     The 16-year-old driver of the car that crashed was charged in Juvenile Court with vehicular manslaughter, but prosecutors seek to have him tried as an adult. A status conference is set for Tuesday.

California Highway Patrol Officer Art Athans said the younger suspect was behind the wheel of a Volkswagen Passat, taking four other teenagers home from the beach party, when he lost control of the sedan, which careened into a center divider near Convoy Street, struck a bridge pillar and flipped seven times, end over end.

Two back-seat passengers in the Passat, Campbell and Foreman, were ejected from the vehicle and died at the scene. The other two passengers, a 17- year-old boy and a 15-year-old girl, were seriously injured.

The teenage driver, who sustained moderate injuries, was found to have been sober at the time of the accident.

Johnson, who was driving a Volvo S40 that did not crash, was not injured, nor were his two passengers.

Babcock said the two drivers left the bonfire at different times, and Johnson claimed the other driver passed him at high speed just before crashing.

But Spieler said other drivers on the freeway were forced to take defensive action and one witness saw both cars pass by at 100 mph.

When confronted by officers after the fatal crash, Johnson admitted racing the other driver, then later denied it, saying he was only going 75 mph, the prosecutor said.

Spieler said the 16-year-old called Johnson on a cell phone as they were racing, but Johnson didn't answer.

Judge Robert F. O'Neill said the fact that Johnson changed his story indicates "a guilty mind."

-City News Service

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