Las Vegas Review-Journal

Accused Socal driver pleads not guilty

$4M bail set in deaths of four sorority sisters

- By Christophe­r Weber

LOS ANGELES — The 22-yearold driver of a BMW that struck and killed four Pepperdine University students in Malibu, California, last week pleaded not guilty Wednesday to four counts of murder, and prosecutor­s said he was speeding at more than 100 mph moments before the crash.

Fraser Michael Bohm was also charged with four counts of gross vehicular manslaught­er, Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón announced at a news conference. Bohm entered pleas of not guilty to the eight felony charges at a court hearing.

Investigat­ors believe Bohm’s car reached 104 mph on a winding stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway where the posted speed limit is 45 mph, Gascón said.

“The investigat­ion revealed the defendant knew his actions were dangerous to human life and deliberate­ly acted with a conscious disregard for human life,” he said.

The defendant’s attorney, Michael Kraut, told The Associated Press the crash occurred as Bohm was being chased following a road rage incident. Bohm had been texting at a stoplight when a man in another car began shouting and then pursued him, Kraut said.

“The guy comes into his lane, hits my client’s car with his car and forces him off the road,” Kraut said.

Bohm passed all field sobriety tests following the crash, Kraut said, and has no criminal record.

Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Sgt. Jim Arens said at the news conference that investigat­ors had “no evidence” that the crash stemmed from a road rage incident.

Bohm was initially arrested on suspicion of manslaught­er after the Oct. 17 crash but was released a day later while investigat­ors gathered more evidence, a Sheriff ’s Department statement said.

“In this specific case, the evidence including toxicology, speed analysis, execution of search warrants, etc., was still pending and took additional time to collect,” it said.

Bohm’s bail is set at $4 million, the district attorney’s office said. If convicted as charged, he could face multiple life sentences.

Those killed were identified as Niamh Rolston, Peyton Stewart, Asha Weir and Deslyn Williams, all seniors at the school’s Seaver College of Liberal Arts.

The four sorority sisters were walking along the road around 8:30 p.m. a few miles from the campus when the driver lost control and sideswiped at least three parked vehicles before crashing into them and hitting two other people, authoritie­s said. The four women died at the scene and the two others were taken to a hospital with injuries.

“The Sheriff ’s Department is relentless­ly working to ensure we get justice for the victims’ families,” the agency’s statement said.

Weir was from Philadelph­ia and studying English, while Rolston, from Los Angeles, and Stewart, from New York, were both studying business, according to CBS Los Angeles. Williams was from an Atlanta suburb and considered becoming a veterinari­an.

Provost Jay Brewster at a campus prayer service last week called them “bright lights with promise and aspiration­s.”

 ?? Richard Vogel The Associated Press ?? Candles and flowers are placed along Pacific Coast Highway, after a crash killed four college students and injured two others.
Richard Vogel The Associated Press Candles and flowers are placed along Pacific Coast Highway, after a crash killed four college students and injured two others.

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