An Indian-fossa manufacturing executive has been sentenced to 25 years for driving at a speed of 150 km per hour, while cocaine resulted in an accident that killed two teenage tennis players.
Amdeep Singh was sentenced on Long Island on Friday for at least eight years and four months in Mainola for a maximum jail time of 25 years as nine families and the victim’s friends condemned him in court.
“Your anger towards me is completely understood and is completely appropriate,” a Tapasya Singh told him before he was sentenced.
He said, “This was all my fault. Losing a child is the greatest grief. I have committed great sin. If someone should die, it should have been me,” he told Judge Helen Gugti.
The crowd of popular teenage supporters who sentenced was so large that two additional court rooms were opened to accommodate them.
Under the punishment, the gargty is imposed, the lion would have to serve the minimum sentence, before he can be considered for parole, with other things, on his conduct in jail, with an expansion of up to 25 years He is not eligible for parole.
Singh, 36, worked as a project manager for a construction company.
NASAU District Prosecutor Anne said that in May 2023, on one night, Singh set a wrong route at a speed of 150 kmph in his Chakma Ram truck in an area with a speed limit of 65 kmph.
He said that he hit Alpha Romeo with four teenagers, two of whom survived accidents, and were caught hiding near a garbage dumpster, he said.
The tests showed that they had 0.15 percent of the blood liquor level, almost doubled from the range of 0.8 percent, and the presence of cocaine, he said.
Two 14 -year -old children, who died, were Ethan Focoits and Drew Hasenbin, tennis stars, who were returning to celebrate their victory in a match.
Focoitz’s family has established a foundation in its honor to promote tennis among young people.
Along with the US Tennis Association and others, it hosts a tennis classic tournament in his honor.
(Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by NDTV employees and is published by a syndicated feed.)