Teen pleads guilty after blog confession (AP) Updated: 2005-12-21 22:04
An 18-year-old passenger who caused a fatal crash by pulling on the steering
wheel pleaded guilty to DUI manslaughter after prosecutors discovered a
confession on his online blog.
Blake Ranking wrote "I did it" on his blurty.com journal three days after the
October 2004 crash that caused a friend's death and left another seriously
injured. He had previously told investigators he remembered nothing of the crash
and little of its aftermath.
Blake was sitting in the back seat as he and then-17-year-old friends Jason
Coker and Nicole Robinette left a party when he pulled the steering wheel as a
prank, causing the car to somersault off the road.
His blood alcohol content after the crash measured 0.185, more than double
the legal limit.
Robinette, who was driving and had no traces of drugs or alcohol in her
system, was seriously injured. Coker lay in a coma at Orlando Regional Medical
Center until he died Jan. 11.
"It was me who caused it. I turned the wheel. I turned the wheel that sent us
off the road, into the concrete drain ..." Ranking wrote in the blog. "How can I
be fine when everyone else is so messed up?"
Ranking later retracted his words, deleting them from the blog and penning an
explanation.
"People say I 'contradict' myself since I 'already admitting pulling the
wheel.' I didn't 'ADMIT' anything. I went on a guilt trip, and I posted the
story that I WAS TOLD . . . Nicole told me I pulled the wheel, I believed her,"
he wrote.
Still, the confession forced him to lead guilty Monday to manslaughter
charges. He could have gotten 15 years in prison, but defense lawyer John Spivey
and Assistant State Attorney Julie Greenberg recommended five years in prison,
10 years of probation and a permanent license suspension.
Circuit Judge Mark Hill agreed to impose the sentence Dec. 28.
Greenberg said she had planned to use the blog as evidence, a first for the
office covering Lake, Citrus, Hernando, Marion and Sumter counties, but almost
certainly not the last.
"Anytime a defendant confesses, that is very relevant and important," she
said.
Ranking posted the lyrics to Eric Clapton's "Tears in Heaven" the day of
Coker's funeral, but prosecutors said his remorse was not always apparent in his
blogs, which included entries railing at Coker's mother because she asked him to
stop calling and coming to the hospital.
"He lost the best friend he ever had," Spivey said in Ranking's defense.
Ken Coker, Jason's father, said his family never wanted prison time for
Ranking, but they wished Ranking would stop writing about them because they felt
the blog was insensitive. He said Ranking would benefit more from psychiatric
counseling.
"There's not enough forgiveness in the world," he said.
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