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Will Tyson Dagley be found guilty of third-degree negligent homicide?

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Will Tyson Dagley be found guilty of third-degree negligent homicide?

Asked by: Super UserKentoine Johnson in General » Crime
Settled on 08/24/2012 17:20 Settled by Super Userkruijs
Winning option:No/no news by settlement date Australian pleads no contest to negligent homicide charge.

The 20-year-old Australian carpet layer accused of causing the death of a 16-year-old California girl in a Keehi Lagoon crash pleaded no contest to a negligent homicide charge this morning in Circuit Court.

Tyson Dagley will be sentenced Sept. 5 at 9:30 a.m. by Circuit Judge Richard Perkins. He faces a maximum jail term of one year and $2,000 fine for third-degree negligent homicide. Dagley has been out on $100,000 cash bail since Monday.

http://www.staradvertiser.com/news/breaking/167192055.html?id=167192055

no contest

n. in criminal law, a defendant's plea in court that he/she will not contest the charge of a particular crime, also called nolo contendere. While technically not an admission of guilt for commission of the crime, the judge will treat a plea of "no contest" as such an admission and proceed to find the defendant guilty as charged. A "no contest" plea is often made in cases in which there is also a possible lawsuit for damages by a person injured by the criminal conduct (such as reckless driving, assault with a deadly weapon, aggravated assault), because it cannot be used in the civil lawsuit as an admission of fault. "No contest" is also used where there has been a "plea bargain" in which the defendant does not want to say he/she is guilty but accepts the sentence recommended by the prosecutor in exchange for not contesting the charge (which is often reduced to a lesser crime). It is standard practice for the judge to ask either the attorneys or the defendant, "Is there a factual basis for the plea?" before accepting it and finding the defendant guilty.
See also: nolo contendere plea plea bargain

http://dictionary.law.com/Default.aspx?selected=1327

thanks charlesf

Predictions

Background

A QUEENSLAND tourist facing a homicide charge over a fatal jet ski crash in Hawaii has also been slapped with a civil lawsuit filed by his alleged victim's high-profile family.

Tyson Dagley, 20, from Logan, south of Brisbane, was riding a rented jet ski on August 5 when it collided with a jet ski ridden by 16-year-old Californian girl Kristen Fonseca.

Ms Fonseca died the next day.

Fonseca's father, Mario Canton, is a high-ranking official with the US Department of Homeland Security and the civil lawsuit against Dagley and the jetski company had been filed in the Circuit Court in Honolulu, the family's lawyer Richard Fried said.

Mr Fried would not say how much the family was seeking in damages, but said they were distraught.

“The mother isn't (holding up),” Mr Fried said.

“The stepfather, who raised the child, is head of our Homeland Security for five western states in the US and he is doing better.
“He's able to chit-chat and talk and so forth,” Mr Fried said.

The lawsuit comes as Mr Dagley is being held on $US100,000 ($A95,700) bail for a third-degree negligent homicide charge over the death.

A Honolulu judge denied Mr Dagley's request to reduce his bail at his arraignment today. Mr Dagley also requested a jury trial on the misdemeanour charge. His next court date is August 23.

Defence lawyer Walter Rodby called the bail “unreasonable”, noting that his client isn't a flight risk because he had surrendered his passport.

Mr Dagley a carpet cleaner, had saved up for his dream vacation, Mr Rodby said.

“He prays for the girl every day, every night,” Mr Rodby said, adding that Mr Dagley suffered spinal injuries and a concussion in the crash. “He himself has not slept.”

The family's lawsuit also names as a defendant Aloha Jet Ski, which rented the personal watercraft to Mr Dagley and Ms Fonseca in Keehi Lagoon.

The suit claims employees did nothing to prevent Mr Dagley from driving recklessly. An employee who rented the watercraft to Ms Fonseca's family and Mr Dagley “failed to give any instructions or warnings about driving at excessive speeds” before turning over the watercraft to the Australian, the lawsuit states.

Company representatives didn't return calls for comment. Mr Dagley's parents couldn't be reached on Monday at the Honolulu hotel where they were staying, AP said.

Investigators say the 20-year-old Mr Dagley was standing on his rented watercraft before it hit Ms Fonseca's watercraft from behind. They say he was looking at his girlfriend, who was taking video and photos, and didn't pay attention to where he was going.

Mr Dagley's girlfriend, Natasha Ryan, 21, is charged with hindering his prosecution. She is free on $US500 bail.

A police report said Ms Ryan told investigators Mr Dagley was sitting down and looking straight ahead before the collision, and that she didn't see the collision.

However, a forensic computer examiner recovered two deleted videos from the memory stick in Ms Ryan's camera which showed the crash. The report said that in the video, Mr Dagley appears to be standing on the watercraft.

Ms Ryan is scheduled to appear in Honolulu District Court on September 7 for the misdemeanour charge. Ms Ryan is not named as a defendant in the lawsuit. Ms Fonseca's parents are upset about an attempt to hide the footage, Mr Fried said.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/queensland-man-sued-over-hawaii-jet-ski-death-of-teenager/story-e6frg6so-1226450637642

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