While it may seem like armchair quarterbacking, the prosecution's claim is that there are steps the driver reasonably could have taken to prevent or mitigate the crash: https://www.denverpost.com/2021/09/28/i-70-crash-jeffco-trail-rogel-aguilera-mederos/I know I had a few days off, so I might have missed this. Anyway...
A truck driver in Colorado get 110 YEARS in jail for an accident in 2019. The accident killed 4, he could have been speeding at 85 but he was also going down a hill at the time. So it might be hard for a truck to maintain appropriate speeds. Oh, AND HIS BRAKES WEREN'T WORKING
After public outcry, prosecutor asks judge to reconsider trucker's 110-year sentence
Rogel Lazaro Aguilera-Mederos was 23 when his semi crashed on a Colorado interstate, causing a fiery pileup that killed four people. More than 4 million people are petitioning to reduce his sentence.www.npr.org
And somehow this deserves 110 years
Why is it here in this thread? The prosecutor is a restorative justice advocate. Somehow. A juror stated while the truck driver made mistakes, not 110 years worth. And they would never given out the guilty verdict otherwise. The judge said something similar. But now his life is gone
But what about the truck company I hear you say? The ones that failed to provide an adequate truck? Yeah, there was evidence provided that they regularly had faulty brake on trucks. Oh.... you meant, did they get charged? What do you think? Of course not
Actually, this article makes it even more damning for the driver:
...and even a video of the truck in question passing right by a runaway truck ramp and subsequently running a car off the road.Aguilera-Mederos, who escaped with minor injuries, missed multiple runaway truck ramps on his way down the steep stretch of interstate, video taken by witnesses shows. Prosecutors said Aguilera-Mederos, who was 23 at the time, tried to apply both the truck’s brakes and its emergency brake, with no effect.
Of course, the 110 year sentence is pretty ridiculous even so and it certainly highlights how careful lawmakers should be in drafting sentencing laws. That's also on the prosecutor for the specific crimes charged, and based on some of the articles I looked at, they're a real piece of work. They knew what they were doing.