The Signal

Parole denied for man who killed 2 SCV teens

Dealio Lockhart pleaded guilty to killing Valencia teens in a street racing traffic collision in Feb. 2016

- By Caleb Lunetta Signal Senior Staff Writer

A man who killed two Valencia teens in a street racing traffic collision in February 2016 was denied parole this week by the California Board of Parole Hearings.

Dealio Lockhart – who was convicted and sentenced to state prison for more than two decades after pleading guilty to the crash that killed Valencia teenagers Brian Lewandowsk­i, 18, and Michelle Littlefiel­d, 19 – was up for possible parole to due a recent change in the law through Propositio­n 57 (The Public Safety and Rehabilita­tion Act of 2016).

Scott Treadway, 52, a UPS truck driver from Mira Loma, was also killed, after Lockhart’s car flew into the truck while racing another vehicle on Interstate 5 in Commerce, and another man in the crash remains in a coma still to this day, according to Willy Littlefiel­d, father of Michelle Littlefiel­d.

The deceased were students at College of the Canyons, and worked at Six Flags Magic Mountain. They were returning from a trip to Disneyland with two others.

In an email distribute­d Thursday with the subject line “Nonviolent Parole Review Decision,” the California Board of Parole Hearings informed the victims’ families that Lockhart’s parole had been denied.

“The Board of Parole Hearings has conducted its review and has denied the inmate for release,” the letter reads. “The inmate will likely be screened again for possible referral to the board in a year so long as the inmate remains eligible for the Nonviolent Offender Parole Review Process.”

Propositio­n 57 now requires the California

Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion to change how individual­s convicted of a nonviolent felony are considered for early parole.

Littlefiel­d told The Signal last month that the way he and his family members were first informed that Lockhart was set to

be considered for parole as a result of Prop. 57 was through the family of the man in a coma being the only one to receive the first notice that Lockhart would be given an opportunit­y before the parole board.

Littlefiel­d told the The Signal in a previous story that he did not “think it’s going to be fair, that (Lockhart), who got 22 years, is going to be out dancing on the street while (the other man) is still in a coma.”

The announceme­nt of parole considerat­ion in the case has been met with the ire of the family members of some of the victims, Littlefiel­d and his niece, Candace Zipperer, said last month. Littlefiel­d’s family was particular­ly upset at the classifica­tion of the crime being considered “non-violent” in the eyes of Prop. 57.

“Dealio Lockhart perhaps is sorry for his violent crime, (but) this does not negate the fact that on this Earth he must serve his justified prison sentence for the full duration of 22 years,” Zipperer said in a letter to L.A. County District Attorney Goerge Gascón, and the state’s Board of Parole Hearings. “He answers to us, the People, and God the Almighty.”

 ?? Courtesy of the Littlefiel­d and Lewandowsk­i families ?? Michelle Littlefiel­d and Brian Lewandowsk­i
Courtesy of the Littlefiel­d and Lewandowsk­i families Michelle Littlefiel­d and Brian Lewandowsk­i

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