The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Officer told Williams she caused fatal crash

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A police officer told Venus Williams she likely caused a crash that fatally injured an elderly man last month but didn’t cite her, saying it appeared the actions of a third driver left her in a bad spot.

A police officer told tennis star Venus Williams she likely caused a crash that fatally injured an elderly man last month but didn’t cite her, saying it appeared the actions of a third driver left her in a bad spot, a newly released body camera video shows.

The Palm Beach Gardens police video shows Williams walking uninjured and speaking calmly to officers minutes after the June 9 crash. The video also shows the other vehicle’s passenger, 78-year-old retired teacher Jerome Barson, was conscious, but bleeding and confused. It was later determined he had a broken spine and internal injuries. He died June 22. His wife, driver Linda Barson, told officers she had a broken arm.

Security video released earlier showed Williams was driving straight on a green light as she exited her neighborho­od but a car turning left cut her off, forcing her to stop midway as she crossed a busy six-lane intersecti­on. When she restarted, her light had turned red and the Barsons’ light had turned green. Their Hyundai sedan plowed into Williams’ Toyota Sequoia SUV.

The body camera video released late Thursday shows Williams, 37, listening intently as she sat in her SUV as Officer David Dowling, the lead investigat­or, explained to her why he believed after interviewi­ng her and witnesses that she was at fault but wasn’t going to give her a ticket.

“You had a green light, so you had the right of way when you started to exit but because you got stuck in the middle of the intersecti­on, you lost that right of way,” Dowling told Williams, who was dressed in a white tennis shirt and skirt and blue baseball cap. Linda Barson, he said, now had a green light “and had no way of knowing that you were going to come across.”

Williams asked Dowling, “In a situation like that, what do you do? Because you can’t back up.”

“Exactly,” Dowling replies. “You just got stuck in a bad situation there. I would just let the insurance companies work it out. I am not giving you a citation.”

Palm Beach Gardens police now say the investigat­ion remains open and no fault has been assigned.

After the crash, Williams competed at Wimbledon, losing in the July 15 finals to Garbine Muguruza. Williams, who has won Wimbledon five times, broke down in tears when asked at a tournament press conference about the crash and Jerome Barson’s death.

Barson’s estate filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Williams on June 30, seeking unspecifie­d damages.

“The body camera footage clearly supports our original assessment that Venus is at fault for this accident,” the estate’s attorney, Michael Steinger, said in a statement Friday.

Williams’ attorney, Malcolm Cunningham, declined comment through his spokeswoma­n.

Philippous­sis’s father pleads not guilty

The father of retired tennis star Mark Philippous­sis pleaded not guilty to molesting two 9-year-old girls while he was a private tennis instructor in California.

Nikolaos Philippous­sis, 68, entered pleas to 14 counts of committing lewd acts and sex acts with children. He could face life in prison if convicted.

Philippous­sis is accused of molesting two of his tennis students for more than a year, beginning in June 2016.

Prosecutor­s say the encounters took place at his home, in his car and at a San Diego County country club.

Philippous­sis was arrested Tuesday at his San Diego home. At the hearing Thursday, his bail was raised from $2.5 million to $9.2 million.

“It is quite a colossal amount,” defense attorney Ryan Tegnelia said.

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 ?? CURTIS COMPTON — ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP ?? Venus Williams returns a shot during a recent tournament.
CURTIS COMPTON — ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA AP Venus Williams returns a shot during a recent tournament.

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