The Signal

Manslaught­er suspect a no-show to court

Woman accused of causing a traffic accident that killed an EMT

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

A bench warrant was issued Monday for the arrest of a Santa Paula woman who failed to appear in court on charges of vehicular manslaught­er in last year’s traffic death of emergency medical technician Christophe­r Ronald Parry.

Yolanda Munoz Hernandez, who was 50 years old at the time of the crash, was scheduled to appear Monday at the Santa Clarita Courthouse on a misdemeano­r count of vehicular manslaught­er and an infraction for unsafe speed, Ricardo Santiago, spokesman for the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office told The Signal Monday.

Hernandez, however, failed to appear in court, according to a bailiff in Courtroom #1 of the Santa Clarita Courthouse.

“A bench warrant is issued when a defendant does not appear on a scheduled court date,” Santiago said. “I see that on this case a bench warrant was issued.”

Hernandez was scheduled to be arraigned on the misdemeano­r charge and the infraction.

Parry, a 35-year-old EMT with American Medical Response Inc., was killed in a traffic collision on Aug. 24, 2016, while he was on his way to work.

A married father of two young children, Parry lived in Ojai and worked in the Santa Clarita Valley.

The fatal crash happened shortly before 5:45 a.m. on Highway 126, just east of the Ventura County line, California Highway Patrol Officer Josh Greengard said at the time of the crash.

The motorcycli­st was operating a 2008 Shang Motorcycle scooter, traveling eastbound on Highway 126 in the “number 2 lane” which is the lane next to the fast lane, at an unknown speed, he said at that time.

A driver of a 2006 Dodge Stratus traveling eastbound on the same roadway in the same line directly behind the motorcycli­st, he said.

The driver of the Dodge was “traveling at a greater speed than (the motorcycli­st),” Greengard said, who “failed to notice” the motorcycli­st directly in front of her.

The Dodge rear-ended the motorcycle causing the motorcycli­st to be ejected off the scooter and over the Dodge, Greengard said in August.

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