The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Local News

July 11, 2012

Driver in crash that killed two MSSU football players pleads innocent to manslaughter

The driver of a sport-utility vehicle that crashed in December on Interstate 44, killing two Missouri Southern State University football players, has pleaded innocent to two charges of involuntary manslaughter related to the athletes’ deaths.

A probable-cause statement on file in Jasper County Circuit Court also alleges that the blood-alcohol content of the driver, Jeremy Johnson, 20, was above the legal limit in Missouri.

Diondre Johnson and Michael McCrimmons, both 19 and from Springfield, were killed in a series of early morning crashes Dec. 2, 2011. Jeremy Johnson, of Harrison, Ark., and Patrick Holt, of Benton, Ark., both sustained serious injuries in the accident.

The four students, who had been athletes at Missouri Southern, were said to have been returning to Joplin after visiting a nightclub in Springfield.

Tyson Martin, Jeremy Johnson’s lawyer, said that information “is consistent” with what he knows of the accident, but he declined to elaborate Wednesday.

“With regard to what went on before the accident occurred, I expect there will be some interesting information come forward about where the boys were and what was going on in the time leading up to the accident,” Martin said.

J.D. Fischer, the Missouri State Highway Patrol trooper who investigated the crash, affirmed in the probable-cause statement that he “noticed a faint odor of an alcoholic beverage” upon entering the ambulance where Jeremy Johnson was receiving immediate medical attention.

Fischer said that Johnson, who was in “obvious pain” from his injuries, tried to answer Fischer’s questions related to his name, birth date, address and phone number.

When Fischer asked Johnson what had happened, “he responded by saying, ‘I tried to control it, I tried to control it,’” according to the statement. Fischer also said he asked Johnson if he had been driving, and Johnson “responded with a slight head nod yes and said again, ‘I tried to control it,’” according to the statement.

Johnson was then flown by medical helicopter to Freeman Hospital West in Joplin. Fischer, according to his statement, left the scene of the accident at 7:30 a.m. and went to the hospital, but Johnson had already been transferred to St. Francis Hospital in Tulsa, Okla. Fischer said he was unable to get a blood sample that morning from Johnson to be able to test for alcohol, a test that is required by state law of drivers involved in a fatality accident.

On Dec. 12, Fischer applied for a subpoena to get Johnson’s medical records from Freeman Hospital West, according to the probable-cause statement.

Fischer said that on Dec. 20, he got the records from the hospital. Those records showed that the blood that had been drawn from Johnson at 4:11 a.m. on the morning of the crash had registered 0.11 percent, according to the statement. The legal limit in Missouri for drivers is 0.08 percent.

When asked whether he could comment on the allegations in the probable-cause statement or on the charges against his client, Martin declined on Wednesday, saying his investigation into the incident is ongoing.

“We’re still in an information-gathering phase from the defense aspect,” said Martin, who is based in Springfield.

The highway patrol said the series of accidents began at about 2:30 a.m. on Dec. 2,  when a sport-utility vehicle, driven by 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 driven by Steven Sweeten, 39, of Cameron, Okla. Sweeten was not injured.

The patrol said Jeremy Johnson was walking across the eastbound driving lane to the highway shoulder when he was hit by an eastbound car driven by Charles A. Lee, 62, of Wentworth. Lee was not injured.

Jeremy Johnson is recovering from his injuries, having undergone several surgeries, and is still facing multiple surgeries, Martin said.



Next court date

Jeremy Johnson’s next date in court is set for Aug. 16. His bond has been set at $1,500.

Text Only
Local News
  • 052113 Farmers-Rebuild2_72.jpg Farmers Insurance teams up with Rebuild Joplin

    Farmers Insurance announced Tuesday that the company will team up with Rebuild Joplin for an initiative to help the community complete its recovery efforts. The company already has placed one of its executives in Joplin, and it is pledging additional funds and volunteer hours by company workers to go toward the city’s recovery.

    May 21, 2013 1 Photo

  • Crowder president to join MSSU staff

    Alan Marble, who will retire as president of Crowder College in June, has been hired as special assistant to the president of Missouri Southern State University. “With his long experience in higher education administration and his intricate knowledge of the needs of students, we knew Dr. Marble would be a great fit at MSSU,” President Bruce Speck said in a statement that announced the transition.

    May 21, 2013

  • Mike Pound: Husband helps pull off surprise for Carl Junction teacher

    Keri Keckley said the key to pulling off the Sunday surprise was the deceptive minister.
    Boy, if that isn’t a great opening line for a crime novel, I don’t know what is. But in this case, the line doesn’t belong in a crime novel. It belongs in this column.

    May 21, 2013

  • ‘Letting Go Day’ planned to help clear the clutter

    When Ann Leach lost most of her possessions in the tornado that struck Joplin on May 22, 2011, she realized that things don’t matter that much.

    May 21, 2013

  • Heather-Buckalew-file.jpg Arma mother facing murder charge in sleeping baby’s death

    Heather Buckalew fell asleep on a couch with her 4-month-old baby after a night last summer drinking beer with her boyfriend. The boyfriend, Donald Harvey, got up to go to work a few hours later and spotted his son, lying face down on a pillow between the back of the couch and his sleeping mother.

    May 21, 2013 1 Photo

  • 0522mooretornado2.jpg Joplin residents lend a hand in Moore

    Joplin is paying it forward. The day before the two-year anniversary of an EF-5 tornado leveling one-third of Joplin, pastors from Ignite Church in Joplin were in Moore, where an EF-5 spent 40 minutes on the ground on Monday.

    May 21, 2013 4 Photos

  • Monetary donations cited as best help for Moore

    Financial support for organizations providing shelter and supplies to Oklahoma tornado survivors is recommended for people who want to help. Otherwise, the word is to wait for requests.

    May 21, 2013

  • 052113 McGuirk1_72.jpg Joplin man continues struggle to recover two years after tornado

    As the Joplin tornado passed overhead, sweeping the house at 2430 S. Pennsylvania Ave. away in its wake, there was a moment of calm. Delbert Mcguirk was on his back in the basement, where he had sought shelter along with his wife, daughter and two grandchildren. In that moment of relative quiet, he stared up into the eye of the tornado.

    May 21, 2013 1 Photo

  • Via Christi Health to cut up to 400 positions across state; Pittsburg impact uncertain

    Via Christi Health announced Today that it would cut up to 400 positions within its system across the state of Kansas to compensate for financial challenges as a result of declining hospital and physician visits.

    May 21, 2013

  • Moore Oklahoma 2013.jpg Globe reporter describes scene in Moore, Okla.

    Joplin Globe Reporter Andra Stefanoni said the tornado-damaged town of Moore, Okla., is eerily reminiscent of Joplin on May 22, 2011.

    May 21, 2013 1 Photo

Must Read Stories
Photos


Sports
Facebook
Poll

Do you think safe rooms and storm shelters should be required for all school buildings?

A. Yes.
B. No.
     View Results
Opinion
Twitter Updates
Follow us on twitter
Follow me on Twitter
Business