Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Trial starts for driver accused of street racing, DUI in deadly crash

- By Nathaniel Percy npercy@scng.com

A driver was street racing with a blood-alcohol content more than three times the legal limit when he caused the crash that killed a longtime Orange County Register editor two years ago, a prosecutor told jurors on Thursday.

Deputy District Attorney Brian Orue, in opening statements, said Louie Robert Villa was speeding northbound on Bristol Street in Santa Ana while trying to catch up with another car when he slammed into a pickup truck driven by Gene Harbrecht, 67, who was making a left turn from southbound Bristol to eastbound Santa Clara Avenue about 11:40 a.m. on July 30, 2020.

Both Harbrecht and Villa were taken to UCI Medical Center, but Harbrecht died.

Harbrecht was a longtime editor of the Orange County Register, which is part of the Southern California News Group.

“He didn't have to die,” Orue said. “If the defendant doesn't drive at 11:40 a.m. at three times the legal limit, Gene is still here.”

A blood draw at UCI Medical Center about 45 minutes after the crash showed Villa's blood-alcohol content at .26, Orue told the jury, later noting that Villa had a previous conviction for driving under the influence and had been warned about the dangers of drinking and driving.

The other driver, Ricardo Navarro Tolento, was arrested hours later with help from a witness who provided informatio­n about his car to police.

Villa, 31, was charged with second-degree murder, driving under the influence of alcohol causing injury, DUI with a blood alcohol level of .08% or more causing injury, and engaging in a speed contest. The DUI charges include enhancemen­ts for inflicting great bodily injury.

Tolento will face trial on vehicular manslaught­er and hit-and-run charges at a later date, Kimberly

Edds, spokeswoma­n for the Orange County District Attorney's Office, said this week.

Villa and Tolento were stopped at a red light on Bristol at 17th Street, taking off when the light phased to green. A surveillan­ce camera caught Tolento's black Infiniti leading, with Villa trying to catch up in a borrowed silver BMW, Orue said.

The prosecutor said jurors would hear evidence that Tolento drove about 77 mph in a 45-mph zone and that Villa was traveling between 81 and 91 mph at the time the BMW crashed into the front passenger side of Harbrecht's truck.

The force of the crash sent the Ford Ranger “flying,” Orue said.

“Mr. Villa made some ridiculous­ly bad choices that put himself, other members of the community, and Eugene Harbrecht's life in peril,” he said.

A motorist who was behind Villa at the light captured the race and the crash on his vehicle's dashcam.

Villa's public defender, Stacy Kelly, said Villa drove in fear for his safety after Tolento swerved into the middle lane in front of him. She told jurors Villa's view of the roadway ahead was blocked by Tolento's black Infiniti until the last few seconds before the crash.

“That's when he saw the Ford Ranger,” she said. “He slammed on the brakes and did everything he could to avoid the collision.”

She said Villa was headed to visit a former boss to ask about the possibilit­y of being rehired after he had been laid off. She said he had been drinking, but did not think his driving would be affected by alcohol and that he “expected to get to his destinatio­n safely,”

She said the tragedy was devastatin­g, but told jurors it did not amount to murder.

The trial resumes at 10 a.m. Friday and is expected to wrap up by the middle of next week, the attorneys said. It wasn't known if Villa would testify.

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