NH governor rips Mass., says DMV 'deficiencies' led to horrific crash that killed 7
New Hampshire Republican Gov. Chris Sununu slammed Massachusetts officials Friday, accusing them of being responsible for the shocking crash in his state that killed seven bikers. The
attack follows revelations that Volodymyr Zhukovskyy, 23, the
Massachusetts truck driver who has been charged with negligent homicide
in the June crash, should have had his driving license suspended for
previous infractions, but the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles
took no action. “Make
no mistake: The deficiencies within the Massachusetts RMV under the
leadership of Ms. Deveney resulted in the horrific crash in Randolph,”
Sununu spokesman Benjamin Vihstadt told the Boston Globe.
“Make
no mistake: The deficiencies within the Massachusetts RMV under the
leadership of Ms. Deveney resulted in the horrific crash in Randolph.” — Sununu spokesman Benjamin Vihstadt
The
governor’s office comments also follow remarks by Erin Deveney, the
RMV’s former registrar, who blamed both New Hampshire and Massachusetts
for failing to transmit notifications about out-of-state drivers whose
licenses should be suspended. She later resigned amid the uproar over
the failure to suspend the man’s license.
Erin Deveney, shown in 2014, resigned as head of the motor vehicle
division in Massachusetts after it was determined that Volodymyr
Zhukovskyy's commercial driving license should have been suspended prior
to a horrific deadly crash in June. (Associated Press)
But Sununu’s spokesman blasted the suggestion of
equal blame, saying, “For Ms. Deveney to try and conflate the severity
of their problem with New Hampshire is shameful and reaffirms why she no
longer has a job.”
Volodymyr Zhukovskyy, 23, of West Springfield, the driver of a
pickup truck in a fiery collision on a highway in rural Randolph, N.H.,
that killed seven motorcyclists, stands with his attorney Donald Frank
during a hearing in Springfield District Court in Springfield, Mass.,
June 24, 2019. (Associated Press)
Since the crash, it has emerged that Zhukovskyy had multiple run-ins with the law. In
May, Connecticut prosecutors said Zhukovskyy was arrested in a Walmart
parking lot after failing a sobriety test. Zhukovskyy's lawyer in that
case, John O'Brien, said his client denies being intoxicated and will
fight the charge.
This photo provided by Miranda Thompson shows the scene where
several motorcycles and a pickup truck collided on a rural, two-lane
highway Friday, June 21, 2019 in Randolph, N.H. (Associated Press)
Zhukovskyy's refusal to take a chemical sobriety test
should have resulted in an immediate suspension of his commercial
drivers license, but no such action was taken by
Massachusetts authorities. Connecticut
officials twice alerted Massachusetts about an earlier drunken driving
arrest. Massachusetts investigators later determined the Registry of
Motor Vehicles hadn't been acting on thousands of out-of-state
notifications about serious driving violations. Westfield
Transport, the company for which Zhukovskyy had been driving on the day
of the June 21 crash, also has a troubled history. According to an
Associated Press analysis of Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration data, Westfield Transport Inc. faced more than 60
violations over the last 24 months. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
No comments:
Post a Comment