Colorado governor reduces I-70 truck driver Rogel Aguilera-Mederos’ sentence to 10 years

Authored by denverpost.com and submitted by johninbigd

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis on Thursday reduced the sentence from 110 years to 10 years for the former truck driver convicted of causing a 2019 fatal crash that killed four people.

Polis called the sentence imposed on Rogel Aguilera-Mederos “highly atypical and unjust” in his Thursday letter announcing the commutation. Aguilera-Mederos, 26, will be eligible for parole Dec. 30, 2026.

“You were sentenced to 110 years in prison, effectively more than a life sentence, for a tragic but unintentional act,” Polis wrote in the letter. “While you are not blameless, your sentence is disproportionate compared with many other inmates in our criminal justice system who committed intentional, premeditated, or violent crimes.”

The decision comes after the 110-year sentence imposed two weeks ago drew nationwide outrage and more than 5 million people signed a petition calling on the governor to reduce the sentence. The outcry prompted First Judicial District Attorney Alexis King, whose office prosecuted the case, requested that the judge reconsider the sentence. First Judicial District Court Judge Bruce Jones granted the request and scheduled a Jan. 13 hearing to reconsider the sentence, though it is now likely moot.

A representative from the governor’s office called Aguilera-Mederos and one of his attorneys Thursday afternoon, Aguilera-Mederos’ defense attorney Jim Colgan said. The governor never would’ve intervened had millions of people not voiced their outrage at the sentence, Colgan said.

Aguilera-Mederos lost his brakes while traveling into Denver on Interstate 70 on April 25, 2019. He failed to take a runaway truck ramp before he rammed his speeding semi into stopped traffic under an overpass in Lakewood and caused a 28-car pileup. Six people were injured in the crash and four people died: Miguel Angel Lamas Arellano, 24, William Bailey, 67, Doyle Harrison, 61, and Stanley Politano, 69.

King, the district attorney, called Polis’ decision disappointing and premature in a statement Thursday night.

“I joined the surviving victims and families of those who lost their loved ones in their wish to have the trial judge determine an appropriate sentence in this case, as he heard the facts and evidence of the defendant’s destructive conduct that led to death, injury, and devastating destruction,” King said. “We are meeting with the victims and their loved ones this evening to support them in navigating this unprecedented action and to ensure they are treated with fairness, dignity, and respect during this difficult time.”

King said her office looked forward to releasing information about the case that they could not reveal while the case was proceeding.

During his October trial, prosecutors argued that Aguilera-Mederos had several chances to prevent the crash. Aguilera-Mederos knew there was something wrong with his brakes dozens of miles earlier, the prosecutors said. He also drove recklessly hours before the crash.

The jury convicted Aguilera-Mederos of 16 first-degree assault and attempted first-degree assault charges. Under Colorado’s mandatory minimum sentencing laws, those “crimes of violence” must be sentenced consecutively, not concurrently. During the Dec. 13 sentencing hearing, Jones said he would’ve chosen a different sentence if he had the discretion.

The sentence prompted calls for rewriting of Colorado’s sentencing laws. In his letter, Polis called for reform as well.

Polis acknowledged the loss of those killed and the pain suffered by those injured and who lost loved ones and said Aguilera-Mederos made bad decisions. He urged Aguilera-Mederos to seek restorative justice with the victims and their families.

“You have wondered why your life was spared when other lives were taken,” Polis wrote in his letter. “You will struggle with this burden of this event for the rest of your life, but never forget that because of this event, countless others will struggle with the loss of their loved ones or injuries as well. And you will serve your just sentence.”

Disastrous-Bonus1718 on December 31st, 2021 at 06:09 UTC »

Well, the narrative changed QUICK. The guy got a massive reaction for him, and not it seems the counter action was too much for people as well. Public outcries suck.

Phresho on December 31st, 2021 at 06:05 UTC »

Does anyone have mile markers breaking down the time line of this incident. Curious if CDOT has any footage.

SeanceGoneWrong on December 30th, 2021 at 23:46 UTC »

While the original sentence was excessive, it is incredibly frustrating to see a false narrative painted that this was a mechanical failure beyond the driver's control and an unavoidable accident.

Such misrepresentation of what happened is incredibly insulting to the families of the victims.

He is also a coward, given he drove several MILES with shot brakes and at no point tried to drive his rig off the road (or into the shoulder) and even avoided a parked semi on the shoulder.

Instead, he decided to "close his eyes" (his words) and drive into dozens of cars stuck in traffic because driving into cars would increase his chance of survival vs driving into a shoulder or into another parked truck.

So for everyone who was simping for this dude and acting like this was an accident beyond his control, y'all got played. Bad.

Also, 10 years is far too low given his level of culpability and refusal to entertain any pre-trial plea deals. 25-30 would have been more fitting.