Ethan Couch Sentenced To Probation In Crash That Killed 4 After
Defense Argued He Had 'Affluenza'
A
16-year-old avoided spending time in prison for killing four people in a car
accident in June after the judge bought his lawyers' argument that he was the victim
of wealth.
CBSDFW reports that Ethan Couch was sentenced to 10
years probation for the drunk driving crash that ended the lives of youth
pastor, Brian Jennings; Hollie and Shelby Boyles; and Breanna Mitchell.
Prosecutors
asked that Couch serve 20 years in prison. His blood alcohol level was .24,
three times the legal limit for an adult.
Psychologist G. Dick Miller testified for the defense that
Couch suffered from "affluenza," a condition in which "his
family felt that wealth bought privilege and there was no rational link between
behavior and consequences," KHOU reported.
Miller
said Couch's parents never punished him for his behavior, even when, in a
separate incident, cops found him passed out in a car with a naked 14-year-old
girl.
As part
of his sentence, Couch will be sent to a private counseling center that costs
$450,000, which will be paid for by his father.
Money
and privilege has helped defendants avoid serious prison time for violent
crimes before.
In a particularly clear example, cited by journalist Glenn
Greenwald, hedge fund
manager Martin Joel Erzinger served just 90 days in
jail after driving the car that seriously injured a bicyclist and fled the
scene of the accident in 2010.
The
district attorney in the case charged Erzlinger with two misdemeanors instead
of a felony, noting that "felony convictions have some pretty serious job
implications for someone in Mr. Erzinger's profession.

No comments:
Post a Comment