PORTLAND, OR—Today, Roberto Medellin, 54, of Pendleton,
was sentenced 21 months in prison by U.S. District Judge Ancer L.
Haggerty for vehicular homicide. On December 10, 2012, the defendant
pled guilty to involuntary manslaughter. Judge Haggerty ordered the
defendant to spend three years on supervised release after he is
released from the Bureau of Prisons. As conditions of supervised
release, the defendant must not possess or consume alcohol. Judge
Haggerty ordered the defendant to surrender to the Bureau of Prisons on
May 2, 2013.
“This case is another tragic reminder that drinking and driving kills,” stated U.S. Attorney Amanda Marshall. “Vehicular homicide is a serious crime with long lasting consequences for families and communities. My office will vigilantly prosecute these cases in Indian Country.”
According to the prosecutor’s statements in court, on May 14, 2012, on the Umatilla Indian Reservation, defendant Roberto Medellin was driving his jeep on a highway in which Misty Dawn Sheoships, a member of the White Mountain Apache Tribe, was a front seat passenger. Medellin’s vehicle went off the highway, crashed into a ditch, and Sheoships died as a result due to severe head and neck trauma. Witnesses called 911 to report the crash.
In a mirandized statement, Medellin said that he had been drinking earlier in the afternoon, prior to going out driving with Sheoships, and that he had fallen asleep at the wheel. He also said, in essence, that he knew he was too tired to continue driving and should have pulled over to rest. Medellin was taken to the hospital due to complaints of body stiffness and just under two hours following the crash, a hospital blood draw revealed that defendant’s blood alcohol content was still 0.096, which is in excess of the legal driving limit of 0.08.
The federal case was investigated by the Umatilla Tribal Police Department and the FBI’s office in Pendleton, Oregon. Assistant U.S. Attorney Craig Gabriel prosecuted the case.
“This case is another tragic reminder that drinking and driving kills,” stated U.S. Attorney Amanda Marshall. “Vehicular homicide is a serious crime with long lasting consequences for families and communities. My office will vigilantly prosecute these cases in Indian Country.”
According to the prosecutor’s statements in court, on May 14, 2012, on the Umatilla Indian Reservation, defendant Roberto Medellin was driving his jeep on a highway in which Misty Dawn Sheoships, a member of the White Mountain Apache Tribe, was a front seat passenger. Medellin’s vehicle went off the highway, crashed into a ditch, and Sheoships died as a result due to severe head and neck trauma. Witnesses called 911 to report the crash.
In a mirandized statement, Medellin said that he had been drinking earlier in the afternoon, prior to going out driving with Sheoships, and that he had fallen asleep at the wheel. He also said, in essence, that he knew he was too tired to continue driving and should have pulled over to rest. Medellin was taken to the hospital due to complaints of body stiffness and just under two hours following the crash, a hospital blood draw revealed that defendant’s blood alcohol content was still 0.096, which is in excess of the legal driving limit of 0.08.
The federal case was investigated by the Umatilla Tribal Police Department and the FBI’s office in Pendleton, Oregon. Assistant U.S. Attorney Craig Gabriel prosecuted the case.
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