Los Angeles Times

DUI driver sentenced in pregnant woman’s death

Repeat offender gets 15 years to life in 2020 crash in O.C. Victim Yesenia Aguilar’s baby was safely delivered.

- By Hannah Wiley

An Orange County driver who pleaded guilty to fatally hitting a pregnant woman while driving under the influence of a cocktail of drugs in 2020 was sentenced on Friday to 15 years to life in prison.

The Orange County district attorney’s office said Courtney Fritz Pandolfi, 44, already had multiple DUI conviction­s when she got behind the wheel on Aug. 11, 2020, while high on a combinatio­n of drugs, including cocaine and methamphet­amine, and fatally hit 23year-old Yesenia Aguilar.

Aguilar was eight months pregnant and out walking with her husband in Anaheim when Pandolfi jumped the curb with her Jeep SUV, crashing into a metal newspaper stand before barreling toward the couple and hitting Aguilar.

Prosecutor­s said Pandolfi continued driving an additional 347 feet without braking before her Jeep became disabled.

The baby Aguilar was carrying, Adalyn Rose, was delivered alive in an emergency C-section.

“A beautiful little girl came into the world fighting like hell to survive the tragedy that took her own mother’s life, and the strength that little girl has shown gave her own father the will to live,” Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said in a statement.

“Adalyn Rose’s first breath will be forever inextricab­ly intertwine­d with her mother’s last breath,” he said. “But that little girl will grow up knowing that her mother’s last act on earth was to do whatever she could to protect her unborn baby.”

Pandolfi, of Garden Grove, pleaded guilty in February to murder and a variety of other charges, including felony driving under the influence of drugs causing bodily injury and two misdemeano­rs for driving with a suspended license.

Some of the counts stemmed from Pandolfi driving under the influence of drugs in November 2019.

Pandolfi had also been convicted of DUIs in 2008, 2015 and 2016, prosecutor­s said, and had received formal legal warnings each time that she could be charged with murder if she went on to kill someone while driving on drugs.

“My client accomplish­ed today what she wanted to do, which was to spare the family the additional grief and heartache of a trial,” Pandolfi’s attorney, Fred Fascenelli, said when she pleaded guilty in February. “She recognizes it was a tragic situation of her making.”

Aguilar’s widower, James Alvarez, posted a video on social media of himself leaving the courtroom with his daughter, now 3, after the sentencing. He wrote that after “the toughest 3 years that [he’d] had to endure,” it was “finally over.”

“I can finally close this chapter of my life,” he wrote on Instagram. “My late wife’s killer finally received the maximum sentence. Even though 15 years to life isn’t enough, I can finally breathe after fighting for so long to get the justice that we deserve . ... and [I] will continue to fight to make sure she never gets out.”

He continued: “I was given a second chance in life because I could have died too ... so I’m going to use this second opportunit­y to do good in this world. I’m going [to be] the voice and strength of every person that lost a loved one from another person’s selfish acts.”

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