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Andrew Gallo Guilty Of Murdering Angels Pitcher Nick Adenhart

AMY TAXIN   09/27/10 09:12 PM ET   AP

Andrew Gallo Guilty

SANTA ANA, Calif. — A jury convicted a construction worker of murder Monday for a drunken-driving crash that killed promising Los Angeles Angels rookie pitcher Nick Adenhart and two of his friends.

It was the second DUI conviction for Andrew Gallo, 23, who held white rosary beads and occasionally looked up at jurors as they returned their verdicts.

As he was led away in handcuffs, Gallo glanced over his shoulder at sobbing relatives of the victims gathered in the Orange County courtroom.

"What this case has shown is that the accelerator, the gas pedal on an automobile in the wrong hands is as dangerous as the trigger on a gun," Nigel Pearson, the father of 25-year-old victim Henry Pearson, said outside court. "And in the wrong hands, it can devastate the lives of many, many people."

Gallo was convicted on three counts of second-degree murder and single counts of drunken driving, hit-and-run driving, and driving under the influence of alcohol and causing great bodily injury.

He faces 50 years to life in state prison at his scheduled sentencing on Dec. 10.

His attorney Jacqueline Goodman said Gallo would appeal.

"I think it's tragic," she told reporters. "I think there's been a miscarriage of justice." She previously said her client did not intend to kill anyone.

Prosecutors said they charged the case as a second-degree murder instead of the lesser charge of manslaughter because Gallo had a previous DUI conviction, had specific knowledge of the dangers of drinking and driving from his own experience, and had signed a court form from the earlier case saying he understood he could be charged with murder if he drove drunk again and killed someone.

To win a murder conviction, prosecutors had to show Gallo acted with implied malice, intentionally drove drunk, acted with a conscious disregard for human life, and knew from his personal experience that he could kill someone.

Adenhart, 22, died just hours after pitching six scoreless innings in his season debut. Pearson and Courtney Stewart, 20, also died in the April 9, 2009, collision in Fullerton. Passenger Jon Wilhite was severely injured.

Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas said it was the 11th DUI-related murder conviction in the county since 2008.

"People are dying here," Rackauckas told reporters. "We want to get the message out there as well as we can that people will be prosecuted for murder when they engage in this type of conduct."

Jurors, who began deliberations Thursday, said they had intense discussions and were well-aware that Gallo had not only ruined the lives of the victims' families but also his own.

"It was emotional," juror Beth Smith said after leaving the courtroom. "I think a lot of us lost sleep over this."

Her eyes welling with tears, Stewart's mother said she felt relieved to finally have a verdict.

"It won't bring Courtney back, but I know she's looking down on us and she's happy," said Carrie Stewart-Dixon, who wore a pink and white bracelet bearing her daughter's name. "It was justice for the kids – and all our families."

Angels pitcher Jered Weaver said he found out about the verdicts in a text message from a team official.

"Obviously, we're glad to see that the guy got what was coming for him, but that's pretty much all I can say. Hopefully it put a little closure to what the families had to deal with," Weaver said.

Said Angels manager Mike Scioscia: "There's certainly no joy involved, but I think it's some closure for a number of families that have been just going through the worst nightmare for a family."

"Nothing that happened today is ever going to bring Nick, Henry and Courtney back or erase that tragedy in the life of the kid who survived, Jon Wilhite. But I think it inches all of us toward a sense of peace, and we're just going to continue to move on," he said.

Prosecutors alleged during the two-week trial that Gallo, whose blood-alcohol level was nearly three times the legal limit, spent hours drinking beers and shots with his stepbrother at three different bars before running a red light and T-boning the car driven by Stewart.

Prosecutor Susan Price told jurors that Gallo had been repeatedly warned by friends, family and court officials about the dangers of drinking and driving, but his arrogance and need to party prevented him from learning the lesson.

Goodman contended the district attorney's office had overstepped by charging Gallo with murder.

She said her client believed his stepbrother was his designated driver and only drove after his stepbrother became too intoxicated and asked him to take the wheel. By that point, she argued, Gallo was too drunk to realize the consequences of driving drunk.

During the trial, prosecutors played a videotaped interview in which Gallo told police he didn't remember driving and apologized to the families of the victims.

___

Associated Press Writer Gillian Flaccus contributed to this report.

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SANTA ANA, Calif. — A jury convicted a construction worker of murder Monday for a drunken-driving crash that killed promising Los Angeles Angels rookie pitcher Nick Adenhart and two of his frien...
SANTA ANA, Calif. — A jury convicted a construction worker of murder Monday for a drunken-driving crash that killed promising Los Angeles Angels rookie pitcher Nick Adenhart and two of his frien...
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10:12 PM on 09/28/2010
Andrew Gallo did not intend to kill those innocent kids. Convicting him of 2nd degree murder is a gross abuse of justice. This verdict is just as much a miscarriage of justice as when teenagers of Shenandoah, Pa beat Luis Ramirez, an innocent father of two with there hands and feat to DEATH and were convicted of simple assault, a misdemeanor. This verdict is just as much a miscarriage of justice as when a Police officer, Jeffrey Cotton was acquitted of shooting Robert Tolan in the chest, in his own driveway in front of his Mom an Dad after being falsely accused of stealing a car. This verdict is just as much a miscarriage of justice as when Police Officer Johannes Mehserle shoots Oscar Grant, an unarmed man on his back! in front of the entire free world and is convicted of involuntary manslaughter.
01:12 AM on 09/29/2010
So what would you consider "appropriate" justice in this case?
11:36 AM on 09/29/2010
To begin with Gallo should have been granted a change of venue but it was denied by Superior Court Judge Richard Toohey. How can anyone have a fair trial with such adverse pre-trial publicity. Appropriate justice would have been a conviction of manslaughter not murder.
06:06 PM on 10/04/2010
I SO AGREE WITH RALPHNICE.
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akrazyrunner
Without healthcare, freedom is just a theory
03:32 PM on 09/28/2010
He killed three people
He should get the death penalty
cryptique
I like cheese.
10:06 AM on 09/28/2010
When did "T-bone" become an acceptable verb in journalism for describing an accident? What ever happened to "broadside"?
08:45 AM on 09/28/2010
Bring back prohibition! Address the root of the issue!
05:09 PM on 09/28/2010
That is a great solution. Did you know that drinking actually increased during prohibition, binge drinking especially. Since you couldn't just go down and pick up a bottle of wine for dinner or a six pack for the guys coming over on Sunday, people would drink as much as they could when they had the chance since they didn't know when they would be able to again. Plus, when people could get their hands on alcohol, they would get the strongest stuff possible. Think about it, if you were going to sneak some home after picking it up illegally, would it be easier to throw a bottle of vodka or whiskey in your briefcase or an entire case of beer? Easy, the hard stuff, so people would be getting drunk faster. What we need is to actually lock people up for DUI, if this guy was locked up like he should be, he wouldn't have drinking and driving this time.
02:04 AM on 09/28/2010
It's hypocritical of lawyers to defend such obvious DUIs with the words - he didn't mean to kill anyone.

I'm sure he didn't however, he did put the drink in his body and knew full well that too much would leave him incapable of driving safely.

He is responsible for the murder of these people and he therefore has to take the punishment because he knew.....
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Trinity718
01:49 AM on 09/28/2010
I wonder....if this was just u or me would he be sentenced to 50 years.....
10:04 AM on 09/28/2010
He hasn't been sentenced yet. He faces a possible 50 years. We'll see what he actually gets.

Remember: He killed 3 people, not just one, and he injured others. Then he tried to flee the scene of the accident. He also had previous DUIs on his record. This cases isn't just about a baseball player.
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Trinity718
10:58 AM on 10/01/2010
I agree, but......
01:35 AM on 09/28/2010
rick Sanches from CNN did the same thing yet hes not in jail hmmm???
05:14 PM on 09/28/2010
I sort of agree, but a couple big differences. First Sanchez had no prior offenses like this guy. Sanchez killed one person not 3. Florida has different laws, if the person you hit is also at fault you are less culpable. The guy he hit was also drunk. While Sanchez was at fault, the person he hit was also. So in that case he can't be charged with and sort of murder. For example if the car Gallo hit was drinking and driving in Florida he could not be charged with murder. Plus this was almost 20 years ago, and Sanchez was not famous at the time.
06:37 PM on 10/04/2010
SO R U SAYING IT OK THAT SANCHEZ KILLED A PERSON BECAUSE HE WAS DRUNK AND BECAUSE HE WAS IN THE STATE OF FLORIDA, AND BECAUSE THIS WAS 20 YEARS AGO?? AND BECAUSE HE WASN'T FAMOUS THEN??? I MEAN HERE WE HAVE A PERSON WHO THINKS ITS OK TO KILL PPL IN FLORIDA BECAUSE THE LAW THERE IS DIFFERENT, BUT IN CALIFORNIA IT'S WRONG BECAUSE THE LAW SAYS ITS WRONG... DON'T THINK THERE IS MUCH OF A big DIFFERENCE. IT WAS WRONG THEN AND ITS WRONG NOW SO WHY THE BIG DEAL NOW THAT A BASEBALL PLAYER WAS KILLED? WHO'S TO SAY THAT VICTIMS WEREN'T DRINKING? THEY WERE OUT CELEBRATING WEREN'T THEY????
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RarianRakista
01:19 AM on 09/28/2010
More people die from people talking on cell phones, changing radio stations or smoking cigarettes, this is pure sensationalism. 100-200 people die a day on the roads, 12 of them are from drunk drivers.
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AngryHarpy
I dwell in possibility.
01:34 AM on 09/28/2010
What's your point?
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RarianRakista
01:35 PM on 09/28/2010
We need harsher penalties for cell phones, eating or smoking a cigarette while driving. These are the majority of people that kill you before 2am.
06:46 PM on 10/04/2010
SIMPLE THAT BECAUSE IT WAS A BASEBALL PLAYER OOHHHH NOW HES A BAD PERSON... ITS ALL PUBLICITY. JUST BECAUSE HE WAS FAMOUS THEY ARE MAKING A BIG DEAL OUT OF IT THAT ALL......
10:04 AM on 09/28/2010
So...are you saying drunk driving should be legal?
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RarianRakista
01:34 PM on 09/28/2010
Driving with a cell phone, eating or smoking a cigarette should have the same penalties as a DUI. As a bike rider, I'm not afraid of drunk drivers until after 2 AM but all day I'm terrified of people yapping on their cell phones or smoking a cigarette. They kill 20x more people than drunk drivers, they should be taken the hell off the road.
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Pinkasaurus
01:10 AM on 09/28/2010
He told police he didn't remember driving? Buddy, if you can't remember getting behind the wheel and striking another car, killing the occupants, you were blitzed. Drunk driving is a serious offense, but obviously this guy didn't take his first conviction seriously. It is sad that people die all over this country because some self-centered people feel the need to get behind the wheel when they are intoxicated.
12:55 AM on 09/28/2010
Of course he's guilty. Why did they even have a trial? He killed an athlete, for God's sake! Why, oh why couldn't it have been just a regular, worthless human being?
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01:02 AM on 09/28/2010
He also killed two other people and seriously injured a third person - it was his secound DUI - how many bits of the apple does he get?
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commonsense68130
11:55 PM on 09/27/2010
Good. A car is more deadly than a gun. Anyone wielding a car like a weapon deserves the same punishment. That goes for high speed chases as well.
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11:37 PM on 09/27/2010
"had signed a court form from the earlier case saying he understood he could be charged with murder if he drove drunk again and killed someone"

What more needs to be known? He did and they did. What kind of idiot would defend this guy, aside from a lawyer paid to do so?
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RodneyMesriani
California Los Angeles lawyer civil
11:33 PM on 09/27/2010
I for one, am happy with the decision of the jurors to convict him with murder.

Even in good faith, he cannot be considered to have had no intent to kill and grievously hurt other people the night he decided to drive drunk. He's had a previous DUI conviction and he had signed a court form from the earlier case saying he understood he could be charged with murder if he drove drunk again and killed someone. I don't see why he deserves sympathy or mercy for his utter disregard of the law and the lives of other people on the road. He chose to drive drink and with or without malice, having signed a court form, he should be aware of the consequences of his actions.

http://www.mesrianilaw.com/Letting-Laws-Be-The-Lesson:-Driving-Under-The-Influence.html
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jalowe1957
Poisonous epitaphs dished out periodically.
11:04 PM on 09/27/2010
Any drunk driver should know that when the rubber hits the road, they put others' lives in jeopardy.
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cameron d
Don't blame me, I voted Smitherman.
11:02 PM on 09/27/2010
Good. There is never an excuse to drink and drive. Absolutely disgusting.