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View Full Version : Yanks fan kills Sox fan



LRtagger
05-16-2008, 10:24 AM
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3382644


NASHUA, N.H. -- A woman accused of running down a man in her car after a Red Sox-Yankees argument in a bar never hit her brakes as she accelerated toward the small group he was in, a prosecutor said Monday.

"She never braked, and she accelerated at a high speed for about 200 feet. She went directly at this group of people," prosecutor Susan Morrell said of Ivonne Hernandez, who is charged with reckless second-degree murder in the death early Friday of Matthew Beaudoin, 29.

http://assets.espn.go.com/photo/2008/0505/mlb_a_hernandez_200.jpg

Hernandez was ordered held without bail after being arraigned Monday in Nashua District Court. The charges, including aggravated drunken driving, are felonies, so Hernandez could not enter a plea.

Her public defender, James Quay, did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

Authorities won't describe the argument beforehand in Slade's Food & Spirits, but witnesses said it heated up when Hernandez identified herself as a New York Yankees fan. Nashua, 45 miles northwest of Boston, is Red Sox country.

Bartender Tanya Moran said the argument spilled outside, and at least one person in a group that included Beaudoin began chanting "Yankees suck!" when they saw a Yankees sticker on Hernandez's car.

Hernandez, 43, allegedly gunned her car and struck Beaudoin and his friend Maria Hughes, 21. Beaudoin's sister, Faith Beaudoin, said Hughes had only minor injuries because her brother shielded her. Beaudoin died of massive head trauma at a hospital, Morrell said.

Hernandez, of Nashua, was arrested at the scene. She acknowledged she had been drinking and refused to take a breath-alcohol test, said Morrell, a senior assistant attorney general. Hernandez said she had been in an argument with the group.

"She indicated to police that she wanted to scare this group of people. She thought they would get out of the way," Morrell said.

Moran told The Telegraph of Nashua during the weekend that Beaudoin came to the bar regularly to socialize, sing karaoke and have fun.

"He came to hang out. He didn't really drink much," she said.

Chris Lovett, a disc jockey at Slade's, told the New Hampshire Union Leader that Beaudoin kept to himself and "wasn't an instigator."

Faith Beaudoin said her brother, who lived in Nashua, was a 1997 graduate of Nashua High School who worked dealing poker at Sharky's Poker Room in Manchester and Nashua. She said his organs, including his heart, liver and kidneys, were donated in hopes of saving other people's lives.

"He was always helping people when he was alive, and he's still saving lives," she said, choking back tears.

LRtagger
05-16-2008, 10:24 AM
and a follow-up article

http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3396526


NASHUA, N.H. -- A woman charged with murder in a fatal crash that followed an argument over the Yankees and Red Sox told police she was trying to scare off people who were hitting her car and jumping on it, a detective said in court Wednesday.

A judge decided Wednesday that the case against Ivonne Hernandez on charges of second-degree murder, reckless conduct and drunken driving can proceed to state superior court. A grand jury will now hear evidence and rule on possible indictments.

Police say Hernandez, 43, told them she had had four beers before encountering a group leaving a Nashua bar near the one she had just left early May 2.

It's not clear what started the parking lot dispute; the sequence of events also is not entirely clear. Hernandez told police someone struck her from behind as she tried to get into her car; Detective James Testaverde testified on Wednesday that Hernandez punched one of the women in the group.

At one point, it turned into an exchange about the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox, Testaverde testified during the preliminary hearing.

Hernandez had a Yankees sticker on her rear windshield. Like the rest of New Hampshire, Nashua, 45 miles northwest of Boston, is Red Sox country.

Police reported Hernandez said four people were taunting her and saying "Yankees suck" after spotting the sticker.

Testaverde said Hernandez drove away from the group, then turned around and headed directly toward them. Matthew Beaudoin, 29, of Nashua, was killed and a woman suffered minor injuries.

"There were no brake marks and there was no abrupt turning," said Testaverde, who had taken Hernandez's statement later on May 2. Prosecutor Susan Morrell said Hernandez was traveling at 30 mph.

Testaverde said Hernandez told police she was frightened and her intention was to scare them away, and that she said at one point the group started running toward her, hitting her car and jumping on it.

Hernandez was taken to a hospital where she received seven stitches. Her blood-alcohol content was 0.16, double the state's 0.08 limit.

Under questioning from Hernandez's lawyer, James Quay, Testaverde said the group called Hernandez vulgar names. Hernandez of Nashua was in court Wednesday but did not testify or show any emotion.

Hernandez will continue to be held without bail. Quay unsuccessfully argued that the charges be dropped.

Members of Beaudoin's family attended the hearing and declined to speak with reporters.

LRtagger
05-16-2008, 10:28 AM
Personally I think she is full of shit...to drive away and then COME BACK, accelerating from 200 feet and not swerve or apply any brakes, her intent was obviously to inflict damage. If she was able to drive away, she obviously was not scared for her safety. If that were the case, the best thing for her to do would have been to keep driving away.

Not to mention that her blood/alcohol was double the legal limit.

DomCasual
05-16-2008, 10:53 AM
I guess I still don't see what she did wrong. :confused:

I kid.

Dortoh
05-16-2008, 12:41 PM
I'm going with PMS but that defense prolly wont hold up.