Published August 08, 2008 03:42 am - JEFFERSON — Angela Ball sobbed into her hands Thursday afternoon as Ashtabula County Common Pleas Court Judge Gary Yost sentenced the convicted drunk driver to 10 years at the Ohio State Reformatory for Women, in Marysville.
Woman handed 10 years for fatal Geneva crash
Richard Turner was killed while Angela Ball was fleeing police
By MARGIE TRAX PAGE - Staff Writer - mtrax@starbeacon.com
Star Beacon
JEFFERSON — Angela Ball sobbed into her hands Thursday afternoon as Ashtabula County Common Pleas Court Judge Gary Yost sentenced the convicted drunk driver to 10 years at the Ohio State Reformatory for Women, in Marysville.
Ball, 28, of Saybrook Township, drove her vehicle into another car April 8, killing 71-year-old Richard Turner, of Geneva, and his dog, as she was fleeing a traffic stop by police on Route 534 for speeding.
Ball, who was drunk at the time of the crash, pleaded guilty to aggravated vehicular homicide and failure to comply. She received eight years in Turner’s death and two years for having fled police.
Yost called the case “one of the most aggravated cases of this nature.”
“There are facts of this case that make it particularly aggravated,” Yost said. “Not just in the death of someone but in that (Ball) was pulled over and fled from police; that she was under the influence and had a combative attitude while in treatment.”
Ball shook visibly and held a single sheet of wrinkled paper in her lap as she apologized to Turner’s family.
“I know — no matter what I say … can bring back your father, grandfather and friend,” Ball said through tears. “I can’t say how sorry I am. I never meant to hurt you, and I am truly torn inside by the tragedy I have caused.”
Ball’s attorney, Jane Timonere, said she is certain Ball can be saved by the corrections system.
“Angela Ball is not trying to make excuses or minimize the effects of her actions,” Timonere said. “But this is a woman who can be saved by our system in our system.”
Timonere also noted Ball’s injuries from the crash and said fear and anger over an argument with her then-boyfriend pushed Ball to drive drunk that day.
Ashtabula County assistant prosecutor Harold Specht Jr. said he isn’t buying Ball’s story of remorse and said Ball admitted to having drunk beer and tequila all day April 8.
“Marijuana was also found in her system,” he said.
Specht said Ball’s own children have been victims of their mother’s destructive behavior.
“(Ball) has an extensive juvenile and adult record and a long history of alcohol-related incidents,” Specht said. “She is notorious in the children’s services department for her alcohol-related violations that involve her children.”
In 2005, one of Ball’s young daughters fell out of a car window as Ball drove, Specht said. The fall crushed the child’s pelvis, he said.