The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Family shows forgivenes­s for trucker

Judge orders man to carry photo of victim in fatal crash for 2 years.

- By Nathan Harris Nathan.Harris@ajc.com

Kimberly Lee just wanted Daniel Crane to see her daughter’s smile.

“I’m sure he saw her in that Jeep calling out for help,” she told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “I thought it would be good to give him a picture of her smiling.”

Crane was sentenced in late June for his part in a wreck last year that left Kimberly Lee’s daughter Summer dead.

At the sentencing, Kimberly Lee told Crane she forgave him, knowing that “in my heart Summer would want me to forgive you.”

Kimberly Lee asked the judge if she could give Crane a picture of her daughter.

She chose a picture of Summer smiling at the beach, to go along with a copy of her mother’s handwritte­n statement.

“I’ve been a judge for 30 years; I’ve seen a lot. It never ceases to amaze me that the victims tend to want to forgive,” Judge Rusty Carlisle told the AJC.

Carlisle, a retired Cobb County judge who was filling in for the day, not only allowed it, but made it a condition of Crane’s sentence. Throughout Crane’s two years of probation, he is required to carry the photograph on him at all times.

Carlisle agreed the condition was unorthodox, but felt the sentence was just.

“I wasn’t doing it to humiliate the man. I thought, it wouldn’t harm anyone, and it might put the family at ease,” Carlisle said. “He’ll put that letter in his pocket every day. He may never open it, may never see the photo, but he’ll think about it every day.”

Kimberly Lee said the judge’s ruling was a “nice gesture,” but what she and the family really wanted was an apology from Crane, something that never came.

“In court, he never said he was sorry, never really showed remorse, even to this day,” she said. “I would have wanted an apology, ‘Sorry for your loss.’”

When Kimberly Lee gave the photos to Crane, he did not say anything.

“I wouldn’t expect him to take responsibi­lity for the wreck,” she said. “I wanted an apology because you were the one that hit my child, and in that hitting, it caused her death.”

Carlisle said Crane’s attorney likely told him to remain quiet. Crane said he was “accountabl­e for my actions” multiple times, Carlisle said.

Kimberly Lee said Crane’s retice n ce is especially “gut-wrenching” knowing that Crane likely saw her daughter suffering after the accident.

“To hear that your child’s calling out for help, that’s heart-breaking,” she said.

Lee’s daughter, Summer Lee, died after a multi-ve- hicle wreck on I-75 on Aug. 20, 2016, when Crane’s tractor-trailer rear-ended Summer’s car, starting off a chain reaction that left seven others injured.

Other details of the case upset the family, including Crane’s being charged with second-degree vehicular homicide rather than first-degree, the defense’s attempt to blame the accident on Summer despite evidence to the contrary, and that Crane did not serve his full 60-day jail sentence.

According to the Henry County Sheriff ’s Office, Crane served over 30 days in jail on a “2 for 1” credit, cutting his jail time in half.

Kimberly Lee said she later confronted Crane on the side of the road outside the jail, where Crane said he was sorry and was too scared to say it in court.

But nearly 11 months after the crash, Summer’s family is trying to put the sentence behind them and look at the positive.

“We miss her every second of every day,” Kimberly Lee said. “When this hap- pens to a family, it changes them forever.”

Lee said the support from the community has been overwhelmi­ng. Close to 4,000 people showed up to her daughter’s viewing, she said.

Summer Lee played softball and tennis, umpired for a younger kids’ baseball league, and ran a photograph­y business on the side.

In memory of their daughter, the family establishe­d the Always Summertime Foundation. Through fundraiser­s, the foundation has granted $1,000 scholarshi­ps to eight students at Locust Grove High School, as well as donated money to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation and supported the family of another local teenager who died in a car accident in May.

“Right now, we’re trying to focus on her birthday,” Kimberly Lee said. Summer turned 18 on Aug. 14, six days before the accident. The family intends to throw a birthday party for their late daughter. A few days later, on the anniversar­y of the crash, they intend to release butterflie­s near the crash site.

Kimberly Lee said her daughter’s spirit will stick with her forever.

“Summer’s smile will now be my smile,” she said.

 ?? AP ?? Daniel Crane must carry a photo of Summer Lee and a copy of her mother’s statement read at the hearing for two years.
AP Daniel Crane must carry a photo of Summer Lee and a copy of her mother’s statement read at the hearing for two years.
 ?? CHANNEL 2 ACTION NEWS ?? Summer Lee, 18, was a senior at Locust Grove High School. She died in a multi-vehicle wreck on I-75 in 2016.
CHANNEL 2 ACTION NEWS Summer Lee, 18, was a senior at Locust Grove High School. She died in a multi-vehicle wreck on I-75 in 2016.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Summer Lee, 18, was killed in a multi-vehicle wreck on I-75 in Henry County on Aug. 20, 2016. Tractor-trailer driver Daniel Crane, who rear-ended her, was convicted of vehicular homicide and sentenced to carry this photo of Lee for the length of the...
CONTRIBUTE­D Summer Lee, 18, was killed in a multi-vehicle wreck on I-75 in Henry County on Aug. 20, 2016. Tractor-trailer driver Daniel Crane, who rear-ended her, was convicted of vehicular homicide and sentenced to carry this photo of Lee for the length of the...

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