Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mother gets 6-year sentence

High-speed DUI crash in July resulted in death of infant son

- By David Ferrara

A Las Vegas mother was sentenced Thursday to six to 20 years in prison for a high-speed, drunken, cocaine-fueled crash that left her infant son dead.

Lauren Prescia texted with Cameron Hubbard-jones, the child’s father, about drinking alcohol in the hours leading up to the child’s July 12 death at Rampart and Lake Mead boulevards, according to court records.

Prescia, 23, pleaded guilty in September to DUI resulting in death and child abuse, neglect or endangerme­nt.

“I would like to apologize to the court and to my son and to the people of the community,” Prescia told District Judge Douglas Herndon. “This has changed my life forever. I just hope that the court will show mercy on me and that I can show everybody who I really am.”

The judge handed down a sentence that had been negotiated between prosecutor­s and Prescia’s attorney.

“It’s more about you and your family and what happened,” Herndon said, urging Prescia to try to help others while in prison. “When things like this happen, and we’re responsibl­e somehow for the death of people we love, all we can really do is try and honor the memory of that individual by being a better person than before.”

Hubbard-jones, also 23, has also pleaded guilty to felony reckless driving, which carries a possible sentence of one to six years behind bars.

Hubbard-jones has since been imprisoned for violating parole in his battery

conviction in a 2018 assault. He was not transferre­d to court Thursday, and he is scheduled to be sentenced on the reckless driving charge next month.

Both initially faced second-degree murder charges, but the Nevada Supreme Court this year prohibited prosecutor­s from charging murder in DUI cases.

Las Vegas police said Prescia was driving 121 mph in an area with a 45 mph speed limit when she lost control of her car, causing the wreck that took the life of the couple’s son, Royce Jones.

After the crash, Prescia told police she had consumed two White Claws. Her blood alcohol content, however, was measured at 0.176 percent, more than twice the legal limit for drivers, according to court

records. Prosecutor­s also said Prescia had cocaine in her system at the time of her arrest.

Police arrested Hubbard-jones days later, contending that he was street racing with Prescia in the moments leading up to the child’s death.

Hubbard-jones was convicted of battery with substantia­l bodily harm and battery constituti­ng domestic violence in a 2018 assault.

Police said Hubbard-jones beat Prescia during an argument over Hubbard-jones spending money at a strip club. A doctor told officers that Prescia “suffered a temporal fracture on the left side of her skull, a nasal fracture and various bruising across all around her face and body.”

 ?? Elizabeth Page Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Lauren Prescia is escorted out of court Thursday after being sentenced for the death of her infant son in a DUI crash in July.
Elizabeth Page Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal Lauren Prescia is escorted out of court Thursday after being sentenced for the death of her infant son in a DUI crash in July.
 ??  ?? Lauren Prescia’s grandmothe­r, Lois Prescia, left, and mother, Kelly Nyman, hug Thursday at the Regional Justice Center after she was sentenced on charges of DUI resulting in death and child abuse, neglect or endangerme­nt for a crash that killed Lauren’s son.
Lauren Prescia’s grandmothe­r, Lois Prescia, left, and mother, Kelly Nyman, hug Thursday at the Regional Justice Center after she was sentenced on charges of DUI resulting in death and child abuse, neglect or endangerme­nt for a crash that killed Lauren’s son.
 ?? Elizabeth Page Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Judge Douglas Herndon speaks Thursday with defendant Lauren Prescia during her sentencing for the death of her 1-year-old son due to intoxicate­d driving.
Elizabeth Page Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal Judge Douglas Herndon speaks Thursday with defendant Lauren Prescia during her sentencing for the death of her 1-year-old son due to intoxicate­d driving.

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