Castle Rock, Colorado (KDVR) – Douglas County judge has been sentenced to life imprisonment on Thursday for the death of a first lieutenant for the American Air Force.
Paul Wayne Stephenson, 57, was convicted of the only identity document that killed Matt Anderson, 39, who was one of the old combat warriors and a religious father.
Stevenson also got an additional 92 years of crash that left Anderson’s children aspiring.
After spending today at the Douglas County exhibition, the Anderson family stopped gas at 7-Eleven located in Plumb Creek Parkway and Perry Street.
The video released by the twenty -third judicial public prosecutor’s office shows a pickup truck moving through traffic and then heading to the parking lot in the store, where Anderson was pumping gas into his family’s car.
The capture truck was then crashed into gas pumps and Anderson, at a high speed rate.
Anderson was pumping gas when he was killed.
Other videos in the hearing showed Castle Rock to help many of Anderson’s injured children. One of these officers fought tears while he was trying to describe the efforts to help the stalling children moments after the accident.
The provincial lawyer used the only aggressive identity charge that includes first -degree killing with severe indifference, saying that Stephennon drank a bottle of whiskey fire ball and two beer before the accident. Then he arrived behind the drivers’ seat “to find more alcohol” when the deadly accident occurred.
This was the third time that Stevenson was convicted of obtaining the only identity document.
Many people gave influence data including a member of the Air Force, Anderson’s wife, sisters and father.
“I hope he sends this message to people who just go out and drink everything and enter their car, truck, or anything else, and he goes somewhere. He killed a man. He killed him,” said Anderson’s father, Wayne Anderson, after the hearing.
The judge has sentenced Stephenson to life imprisonment without conditional release in addition to 92 years of all charges that also included attempted murder and child abuse.
“This is a good sentence. This is a good sentence because we are here because the defendant did not care.roadVice President of the Judicial Region Nate Marsh.
During hearing, Anderson videos and photos show a green military jump suit, leaving the Douglas County exhibition last summer. He was smiling and paying a cart with one of his children in him.
It was only 10 minutes before he was killed.
Returning to the court hall, Stephenson has never apologized for the killing of Anderson. He spoke in the court, saying that the trial was unfair.
Distinguished court judge Victoria Klingsmith talked strictly to Stephenson, saying that the defendant continued everything about him and then eventually gave him a life sentence.