Drunk driver given jail time

Published: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 5:14 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

PROVO — With her son's picture pinned on her jacket, Kristy Bowler stood before a judge Wednesday and announced it had been one year, nine months and five days since she last saw her son.

Aaron Newton was killed in a car crash caused by his friend drinking and then driving.

Teisha Painter, 21, was the driver and was charged with two third-degree felonies, one for driving under the influence of drugs and one for automobile homicide. She was ordered Wednesday to serve up to five years in the Utah County Jail and 36 months of probation. Both zero-to-five-year jail terms will be served concurrently.

Before the sentencing, Bowler begged the judge to consider a harsh punishment. She told of her son's charm and wit and said he liked to play games, watch movies and listen to music. These were just some of the things the family would miss about Aaron.

"Another family, another mother cannot go through this," Bowler said. "We as (Aaron's) family have been given a life sentence."

Painter had been driving with Newton, then 20, in the car when she hit another vehicle head-on on Sept. 19, 2007. While Newton was pronounced dead shortly after the accident, Painter survived and was in the hospital for several weeks recovering from injuries.

Story continues below

"Any death or injury is tragic," said Painter's attorney, Michael Esplin. "This one to (Painter) is more tragic in the way she feels with it because she and Aaron were best friends."

Since the accident, Painter has participated in a seven-month inpatient treatment for alcoholism and was still in the outpatient program in California until her sentencing Wednesday.

Esplin asked the judge to let Painter continue with the program until she completed all 12 steps before serving any time, but 4th District Judge Claudio Laycock said Painter had one week to report to jail.

The defendant's father, Patrick Painter, said the program helped his daughter tremendously and that it had made a visible difference.

"We've seen a big turnaround in her," he told the judge. "She is a completely different person."

Painter has also spoken about the negative effects of drinking and driving to other adults in hospitals and treatment centers who are addicted.

Newton's father, Steve, said he had been e-mailing Painter over the past several weeks and said he wanted to see Painter continue to help others and make the most out of her life by continuing her treatment. He said he thought that was what his son would have wanted.

Recent comments

I wonder if the young man had also been intoxicated. Can you also...

JJ | June 25, 2009 at 5:04 p.m.

I would love to see the victoms family file a large lawsuit since it...

lAWSUIT | June 24, 2009 at 5:50 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

you see the left has Micheal Moore, most of Hollywood and a slew of other...

Folks To clarify, USU beat WSU on Road handily in Ogden and will play...

Why so hard folks? You all never made a bad choice in your life? The tone of...

A terrific sports article...a beautiful written replay of an outstandingly...

Glen Beck is a conservative religious extremist. Haven't these extremists...

Romney: Let private sector flourish

Exactly how do you think American freedoms were under attack during WWII? Do...

Nice try at establishing a slogan for George. It's too late because -...

Awesome article! One of the best I've read here.

Obama: Plans will increase hiring

like the one Obama is creating for us to live in. Creating jobs that feed out...

Hall a finalist for QB's Manning Award

BYU won the MWC in 2007, the year of 4th and 18.

Advertisements