Los Angeles Times

Why she kept filming after her sister died

Obdulia Sanchez, charged in fatal crash, says she hoped video could pay for funeral.

- By Veronica Rocha

A woman accused of driving drunk as she livestream­ed a crash that killed her younger sister says she continued filming after the wreck in hopes of helping to pay for her sibling’s funeral expenses.

Obdulia Sanchez, who has been detained since her July 21 arrest, described her reasoning in a four-page, double-sided letter to a reporter at KGPE-TV in Fresno.

“I made that video because I knew I had more than 5,000 followers,” the 18-year-old Stockton resident wrote. “It was the only way my sister would get a decent burial. I would never expose my sister like that. I anticipate­d the public donating money because my family isn’t rich.”

Sanchez apologized for making the video, saying, “I look awful, but I accomplish­ed my goal.”

More than $12,000 was donated to a GoFundMe account created by the family to help pay for her 14-yearold sister’s funeral.

Sanchez, who is charged with half a dozen criminal offenses, including gross vehicular manslaught­er, told the station in a separate interview that the video wasn’t her first livestream while driving.

She said livestream­ing was “like a reflex,” an act carried out “all the time.”

Sanchez’s case gained attention after she broadcast the July 21 crash on Instagram Live.

The video showed Sanchez looking into the camera and singing as she drove on a highway in Los Banos, with her sister, Jacqueline Sanchez, and a second 14-year-old girl in the backseat.

As Sanchez recorded herself, she lost control of her 2003 Buick and crashed. The video stopped.

During that time, Sanchez told the news station, she called 911 for help.

After the crash, Sanchez started recording again. She panned to the body of her sister, who was lying in a grassy field and appeared to have suffered major head trauma.

As the video streamed, Sanchez said: “I … killed my sister, OK? I know I am going to jail for life, all right? This is the last thing that I wanted to happen, OK?”

Merced County Deputy Dist. Atty. Harold Nutt, who is prosecutin­g the case, has said Sanchez’s blood-alcohol content was 0.10% at the time of the crash.

He said Sanchez was inattentiv­e, driving erraticall­y and not holding the wheel.

Sanchez’s court-appointed attorney, Ramnik Samrao, told The Times last week that other factors may have led to the crash, including issues with the tread on the vehicle’s tires that caused one to blow out.

Samrao said Sanchez watched the video for the first time from jail on Aug. 13. At that moment, he said, she realized the gravity of her actions.

Sanchez told KGPE she had several goals for her future and hoped to tell her story to students.

She said she planned to dedicate a music album to her sister and write a song about the dangers of texting and driving.

 ?? Scott Smith Associated Press ?? “I LOOK awful, but I accomplish­ed my goal” of raising money, Obdulia Sanchez, 18, wrote to a reporter.
Scott Smith Associated Press “I LOOK awful, but I accomplish­ed my goal” of raising money, Obdulia Sanchez, 18, wrote to a reporter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States