Texarkana Gazette

Man who crashed into fountain pleads guilty to intoxicati­on assault

Passenger suffered traumatic brain injury, respirator­y failure

- By Lynn LaRowe

A man whose passenger was permanentl­y disabled when he crashed into a fountain in front of Texarkana’s downtown federal building pleaded guilty Monday to intoxicati­on assault in Bowie County. Harvey Lynn Terry, 54, appeared before 202nd District Judge John Tidwell with Chief Public Defender Rick Shumaker. Terry had a blood alcohol level of .239, well above the legal limit of .08, when his teal Nissan pickup careened into the fountain July 26, 2016, shortly before 1 a.m., according to a probable-cause affidavit used to create the following account.

Terry’s passenger, Donnie Joe Smith, 62 at the time of the crash, suffered a traumatic brain injury, bleeding in his brain and respirator­y failure as a result of the crash but survived.

Officers responding to the crash immediatel­y noticed the odor of alcohol coming from Terry. Both he and Smith were taken to CHRISTUS St. Michael Health System for treatment. After the crash, Terry was interviewe­d by Texarkana, Texas, police officer Darren Jones. Jones allegedly noticed signs of intoxicati­on in Terry’s eyes and could smell alcohol coming from Terry’s breath as he spoke.

“I asked Terry to say the alphabet all the way through. Terry attempted to say the alphabet twice but was unable

to finish both times,” the affidavit states. “When I asked Terry for a third time he refused.”

When asked to rate his intoxicati­on on a scale of one to 10, with “10 being the highest level of intoxicati­on he could imagine for himself,” Terry allegedly gave himself an eight.

“When I asked Terry for a second time what he had been doing on this date he informed me, ‘drinking and driving,’” the affidavit states.

Terry allegedly told Jones that he and Smith consumed “a few 12 packs of beer” while at the Internatio­nal Room, also known as the Double R bar, on State Line Avenue.

“Terry stated that he was unsure when or why he left the bar but stated he knew he was heading home when he crashed,” the affidavit states.

Results from blood samples collected from Terry the day of the crash were received from the Texas Department of Public Safety in September. According to the affidavit, Smith was still in the hospital two months following the wreck. Terry has a long history of arrests for drunken driving and boating while intoxicate­d.

A lawsuit accusing the Internatio­nal Room of overservin­g Terry and Smith was filed by his co-guardians last year in Miller County circuit court. The suit alleges the men were allowed to leave the bar and drive in a state of visible intoxicati­on.

The Internatio­nal Room filed a response in December denying any wrongdoing. The bar denies Terry was obviously intoxicate­d when he was served alcohol there and alleges he is to blame for the crash.

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