Jurors watch videotape of police interview with man accused of DUI crash that killed pitcher

By AP
Friday, September 17, 2010

Jurors watch videotape of Gallo police interview

SANTA ANA, Calif. — The man accused of causing the crash that killed a promising Los Angeles Angels pitcher and two others told investigators he was so drunk he couldn’t remember getting in the car, according to a videotaped police interview played in court Thursday.

Andrew Thomas Gallo told investigators he and his stepbrother Raymond Rivera started the night of drinking at Johnny Carino’s bar in Covina where his then-girlfriend was a waitress, City News Service reported.

Gallo, 23, is charged with three counts of second-degree murder for driving drunk and causing the April 2009 crash that killed pitcher Nick Adenhart, 22; Courtney Stewart, 20; and Henry Pearson, 25.

Gallo and Rivera left after about 90 minutes and made a quick trip to pick up an Xbox game console from a friend of Rivera’s before going to The Well.

“I told him I have to go home,” said Gallo, who was going to start a new job laying tile the next day, but the pair went to the bikini bar anyway.

“I told him we’ve got to stop” drinking, but before Gallo knew it someone had ordered them a round of shots, he said.

Gallo told the detectives he avoided shots of hard liquor, because he wasn’t able to handle it. “The last time I did that at a family party things got out of hand and I blanked out,” he said.

Gallo told investigators he couldn’t remember how he and Rivera ended up in Fullerton and he was unfamiliar with the area.

“I don’t remember getting in the car or leaving the place,” he said. “The only thing that woke me up was the hit.”

Later, he said, “I guess while I’m driving home I blanked out … We were trying to get home and we got lost. I don’t know anyone in Fullerton.”

Gallo said he was surprised he was in the driver’s seat because his license was suspended for not completing the terms of his conviction for driving under the influence in 2006.

“I don’t know why I was driving. I’m not allowed to drive,” he told the investigators.

Earlier Thursday, jurors watched a police interview with witness Esteban Quiroz, who was trying to make a left turn at the same intersection just seconds before the wreck.

Quiroz, 34, told police in the April 9, 2009, videotaped interview that he got a turn signal and was inching into the intersection when he saw a red minivan traveling about 70 or 80 mph approaching from his left.

Seconds later, as Quiroz watched, the minivan ran the red light and T-boned the car carrying the victims, he told officers.

“It was just flying. You don’t expect a car to be going that fast toward a red light. Next thing I knew, it was on top of the gray car,” he said. “What was really apparent … is that the van was not going to stop.”

Quiroz’s car was swiped by the victims’ car as it spun around after the impact and his airbag deployed, knocking his glasses off his face. He was not seriously injured.

Gallo has pleaded not guilty to the murder charges, as well as to felony hit-and-run and driving while intoxicated and causing injuries to two other people.

Gallo, whose blood-alcohol level was nearly three times the legal limit, according to police, could face a maximum sentence of more than 50 years to life in prison if convicted.

The remainder of Gallo’s videotaped interview will be played for jurors when court resumes on Monday.

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