Los Angeles Times

$27 million paid in crash caused by speeding deputy

Girl is left with brain damage after officer with lights and siren off hits family vehicle.

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde

The family of a girl who suffered permanent brain damage after a crash involving a Sacramento County sheriff’s patrol vehicle has won a $27-million settlement, officials said.

Julian Awad, now 12, was a passenger in her family’s car on July 14, 2017, when a sheriff ’s SUV sped through an intersecti­on and plowed into their vehicle, according to the Sacramento Bee.

The deputy driving the SUV was responding to a backup call about a fight in the area and did not turn on emergency lights or a siren while crossing the intersecti­on, according to a California Highway Patrol incident report.

The deputy and all five family members — Julian, her mother, father and two siblings — were injured.

The $27-million settlement, which is one of the largest civil lawsuit settlement­s in Sacramento County’s history, includes attorneys fees and will help cover the costs of Julian’s medical care, which she will probably need for the rest of her life, according to the Bee.

“This settlement reached between the county and the plaintiffs cannot undo that moment in time of the horrific accident that changed [the family’s] lives forever,” Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones said in a statement.

“Although no amount of money can truly compensate them for what they’ve been through, I sincerely hope that in some way it helps them in their recovery and moving forward.”

The deputy involved is still employed but “received substantia­l discipline” and is not on a patrol assignment, according to the Sheriff ’s Department.

Robert Buccola and Jason Sigel, attorneys for the Awad family, could not immediatel­y be reached for comment. But Sigel told the Bee that Julian has improved far more than doctors ever believed she would.

“For the first year and a half ... you could call her name or play her favorite songs on the iPad and she wouldn’t respond,” he said. “But now she’s beginning to turn to that stimulus. She’s beginning to reach out to things. By all accounts, it’s a pretty miraculous recovery.”

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