LITTLEROCK EX-CONVICT GETS FOUR YEARS FOR DEATH OF PARAMEDIC.Byline: Daily News SAN FERNANDO San Fernando, city, Argentina San Fernando (săn fərnăn`dō), city (1991 pop. 144,761), Buenos Aires prov., E Argentina. It is a district administrative center in the Greater Buenos Aires area. -- An ex-convict in the country illegally was sentenced Monday to four years in prison for the traffic death of an off-duty paramedic par·a·med·ic n. A person who is trained to give emergency medical treatment or assist medical professionals. paramedic on a rural stretch of highway in Agua Dulce Agua Dulce is Spanish for "sweet water". It also refers to various locations: In Mexico:
Juan Bibinz, 39, of Littlerock unexpectedly pleaded guilty last week to vehicular manslaughter vehicular manslaughter n. the crime of causing the death of a human being due to illegal driving of an automobile, including gross negligence, drunk driving, reckless driving, or speeding. in the death of Michael S. Sprinkles, a 37-year-old father of two who was killed around dawn last Sept. 6 on Sierra Highway. Sprinkles was riding his motorcycle home from an overnight shift at Los Angeles County Fire Station 107 in Canyon Country. Bibinz crossed the center divider and hit Sprinkles head-on, according to witnesses. More than 500 firefighters, police, family members and co-workers from American Medical Response American Medical Response, Inc. (AMR) is the largest private ambulance provider in the United States. AMR and EmCare are wholly owned subsidiaries of EMSC L.P., an emergency management company held by the investment firm Onex. AMR is based out of Greenwood Village, Colorado. , where Sprinkles worked 10 years, crowded his memorial service in September. His wife, Rose, and sons Austin and Logan, 11 and 9 at the time, met privately with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger afterward. Bibinz had prior felony convictions, served time in state prison, used numerous aliases and was deported in 1999, according to authorities. He returned to the U.S. illegally and faces deportation again after his release from prison. Bibinz had faced a maximum of six years in state prison if he had gone to trial and been convicted. |
|
||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion