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Truck driver who killed five cyclists had methamphetamine in his system

Jordan Barson has been charged with reckless driving resulting in death

The truck driver who killed five US cyclists last week had methamphetamine in his system, according to prosecutors. Jordan Barson told Nevada Highway Patrol troopers he didn’t remember crashing into the group of cyclists on US Highway 95, and he must have fallen asleep at the wheel.

Around 18 cyclists were travelling together when the crash occurred on US Highway 95 south of Boulder City at around 9.40am on December 10.

Barson struck a number of them from behind after crossing into the bike lane and also hit a Subaru hatchback that had been travelling with the group as a ‘safety vehicle’.

Erin Ray, Gerrard Nieva, Michael Murray, Aksoy Ahmet, and Tom Trauger all died at the scene, while two others were seriously injured.

The New York Times reports that Barson has now been charged with multiple felonies after he was found to have the stimulant methamphetamine in his system.

He has been charged with five counts of driving under the influence resulting in death, one count of driving under the influence resulting in substantial bodily harm, and five counts of reckless driving resulting in death.

“There’s nothing out there,” commented one local cyclist familiar with the road. “You’d see cyclists coming for a while, so now it makes sense that he must have been impaired when he hit them.”

Clark County district attorney Steven B Wolfson said Wolfson had an “extremely high” level of methamphetamine in his system at the time of the collision.

“I’m at a loss for words,” he said. “I have said hundreds of times, to countless people, making the choice to get behind the wheel of a car when you are intoxicated is reckless. Those actions are unacceptable, and they have consequences.

“Tragically, this type of reckless behaviour has left five people dead, several injured, and our community in mourning once again.”

Barson initially told investigators he thought he had fallen asleep at the wheel of his box truck. He later admitted he had taken methamphetamine the afternoon before the crash and had not slept well that night.

Police body cam footage shot in the wake of the collision showed him repeatedly leaning against his truck for balance when asked to walk in a straight line.

Bicycling.com reports that the cyclists who lost their lives are to be honoured with a virtual memorial ride on Zwift tomorrow. A GoFundMe page has also so far raised over $96,000 for their families.

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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4 comments

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Projectcyclingf... | 3 years ago
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The only suitable punishment for this druggie killer driver, that guarantees he doesn't get behind the wheel again and risking many more lifes, is the death penalty, which may help deter other low life scumbags from commiting these deadly crimes.

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TheBillder replied to Projectcyclingfitness | 3 years ago
8 likes

Yeah, that's working really well in the USA, with a zero murder rate these days. Also, back in Dickensian times, almost all UK crime stopped as people could be hanged for pick-pocketing.

If you want to stop drug driving crime, you need to stop drug abuse, and that's a different ball game. In this case, incarceration is likely to keep the driver off the roads.

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grOg replied to Projectcyclingfitness | 3 years ago
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The death penalty has been shown to have little deterrence effect.. I would rather see long prison terms with hard labour, especially labour that has a beneficial economic outcome for the taxpayers that fund prisons.

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mike the bike replied to grOg | 3 years ago
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grOg wrote:

The death penalty has been shown to have little deterrence effect.. I would rather see long prison terms with hard labour, especially labour that has a beneficial economic outcome for the taxpayers that fund prisons.

It should be easy to satisfy both you and projectcyclingf, who wants the death penalty reinstated.  All we need do is pay some prisoners to execute other prisoners.  The first group could be paid handsomely, putting them in the higher tax bracket, the second group would have their criminal tendencies permanently curtailed.  A win-win, yes?

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