JOPLIN, Mo. —
A lawsuit has been filed against the owners of a defunct Springfield nightclub for serving alcohol to a 19-year-old who was driving a car that crashed late last year, killing two Missouri Southern State University football players.
Dionna Johnson, mother of Diondre Johnson, one of the victims, also has filed suit against Jeremy Johnson, the driver in the December 2011 accident on Interstate 44 east of Sarcoxie.
Diondre Johnson and Michael McCrimmons, both 19 and from Springfield, were killed in a series of early morning crashes on Dec. 2, 2011. Jeremy Johnson and Patrick Holt, of Benton, Ark., both sustained serious injuries in the accident. All four had been athletes at Missouri Southern.
The lawsuit was filed earlier this week in Greene County Circuit Court in Springfield. Defendants are listed as NOCI PCE LLC, the operator of the nightclub, as well as Jeremy Johnson, of Harrison, Ark. Attempts to reach them for comment were unsuccessful.
Dionna Johnson alleges in her lawsuit that the owners of Icon Nightclub, formerly located in downtown Springfield, should not have served alcohol to Jeremy Johnson, who was 19 at the time. Shannon Vahle, an attorney in Springfield who is representing the mother, could not be reached for comment Friday.
There were no attorneys listed for the defendants yet.
According to the Missouri State Highway Patrol, the series of accidents began at about 2:30 a.m. Dec. 2, when a sport-utility vehicle driven by Jeremy Johnson ran off the westbound lanes into the median cables two miles east of Sarcoxie. The vehicle overturned and came to rest in the eastbound passing lane of the interstate.
Diondre Johnson was thrown from the vehicle, the patrol said. The patrol said McCrimmons and Holt were inside the sport-utility vehicle when it was struck by an eastbound tractor-trailer rig.
The patrol said Jeremy Johnson was walking across the eastbound driving lane to the highway shoulder when he was hit by an eastbound car.
Jeremy Johnson pleaded innocent in July to two charges of involuntary manslaughter related to the athletes’ deaths. A probable-cause statement on file in Jasper County Circuit Court alleged that his blood-alcohol content following the accident was 0.11 percent. The legal limit in Missouri for drivers is 0.08 percent. Springfield attorney Tyson Martin is representing Jeremy Johnson in his criminal case.
Jeremy Johnson is listed as a defendant in a separate wrongful-death lawsuit filed in Jasper County Circuit Court less than a month after the accident by Larry McCrimmons, the father of the second victim. Also listed as defendants are the company that owned the tractor-trailer rig that hit Johnson’s vehicle as well as the drivers of the tractor-trailer rig and the car that hit Jeremy Johnson as he was walking along the interstate.
In his lawsuit, McCrimmons alleges that Jeremy Johnson caused the accident because of negligence by driving at an excessive speed.
The Associated Press and Globe staff writer Emily Younker contributed to this report.
Local News
Lawsuit filed in MSSU athlete’s death
- Local News
-
-
Joplin sends team to help Moore
A team of public safety workers from Joplin were deployed Monday night to assist in Moore, Okla.
-
Two plead guilty to post-tornado wire theft
Two defendants pleaded guilty Monday to stealing copper wire from utility poles in the wake of the May 22, 2011, tornado that struck Joplin. Timothy M. Silveria, 45, of Joplin, and Nycoa K. Kracht, 32, of Laurel, Ind., entered open pleas of guilty in Jasper County Circuit Court to felony counts of theft from a public utility.
-
Vandals cause $37,000 in damage at Joplin business
A Joplin business owner was the victim of a weekend vandalism spree that resulted in an estimated $37,000 in damages and theft, in addition to putting the company out of service for at least two days.
-
Mike Pound: My wife hid the clutter so well, I may be missing
OK, now I’m worried. Late Sunday afternoon, my wife announced that she was going to clean up our kitchen and our family room. When she made that announcement, our 15-year-old daughter, Emma, and I laughed because, at the time, our kitchen and family room were sort of cluttered.
-
Joplin council meeting canceled due to storm forecast
Storm forecasts have caused the Joplin City Council to cancel its meeting tonight.
-
Carthage School Board meeting is postponed
The Carthage School Board meeting set for today has been postponed for due to threats of severe weather.
-
Storms cause damage throughout the Four States
Four-State Area residents hunkered down twice Monday to ride out tornadoes and powerful spring storms, then went to work cleaning up. The worst damage from Monday night’s storm was being reported in Ottawa County, Okla., near Wyandotte. That followed a report of an EF-1 tornado early Monday morning near Carthage.
-
Alan Marble, Crowder College president, to retire
After 27 years with Crowder College, President Alan Marble has announced his plans to retire on June 30, the formal end of the academic year. “It’s just the right time,” Marble, 58, said in a telephone interview Monday morning. “I’ve enjoyed, I think, every minute of these 27 years, but it’s time to move on to the next challenge.”
-
EF1 tornado hit Carthage early Monday morning
Clean-up was underway in Carthage after winds estimated at 90 to 100 miles an hour damaged buildings and toppled trees and power lines in the Carthage area just after midnight early Monday.
-
Federal agency proposes adding two Missouri mussels to endangered species list
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will host a public meeting in Joplin Tuesday and another meeting later in the week in Southeast Missouri to provide details and answer questions about adding two freshwater mussels to the endangered species list.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Joplin sends team to help Moore



