California trucker guilty of killing 7 farmworkers in I-5 crash in Oregon

Two years ago, a Marion County jury found Lincoln Smith guilty of killing seven farmworkers when he crashed his semitruck into a van stopped on the side of Interstate 5.

After deliberating for almost eight hours over two days, the jury found 54-year-old Smith guilty of seven charges of second-degree manslaughter and reckless driving.

However, based on Smith’s evidence in court that he was sleepy, not intoxicated, at the time of the May 18, 2023, collision, jurors cleared him of driving while intoxicated.

At the hospital, the resident of North Highlands, California, had evidence of morphine, fentanyl, and methamphetamine in his blood, and state troopers discovered a piece of speed in his pants pocket.

When the crash happened just north of Albany, where the interstate crosses the Santiam River, Smith testified that the effects of a late-night drug binge had subsided by the next morning, stating that he had merely fallen asleep at the wheel and failed to notice the exit for a rest stop.

Given the seriousness of the collision, Circuit Judge Daniel Wren may sentence more or less time in jail, while Oregon sentencing guidelines stipulate a prison term of little more than six years in second-degree manslaughter cases.

A seventh person was pronounced dead on a medivac en route to the hospital, while six others passed away at the spot.

They were named as Josue Garcia-Garcia, 30, Luis Enrique Gomez-Reyes, 30, Alejandro Jimenez Hernandez, 36, Eduardo Lopez-Lopez, 31, Alejandra Espinoza-Carpio, 39, Juan Carlos Leyva-Carrillo, 37, and Gabriel Juarez-Tovilla, 58.

The van’s driver paused to reposition a trailer that held the farmworkers’ tools after they had just completed harvesting beets and were heading back to their nearby houses.

See also  Trail Blazers have no answer for LeBron James in loss at Lakers

Since a bus transporting tourists crashed through an Interstate 84 railing in 2012, killing nine people, it was the deadliest collision to occur in Oregon.

For The Oregonian/OregonLive, Zane Sparling reports on court proceedings and breaking news. You may contact him at [email protected], 503-319-7083, or pdxzane.

Your support is essential to our journalism. Visit OregonLive.com/subscribe to sign up as a subscriber right now.

Latest Public Safety News

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *