institutional access

You are connecting from
Lake Geneva Public Library,
please login or register to take advantage of your institution's Ground News Plan.

Published loading...Updated

They Were Convicted of Killing with Their Cars. No One Told the California DMV

  • Over the last five years, numerous vehicular manslaughter convictions from California courts have not been communicated to the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles, resulting in drivers improperly retaining valid licenses.
  • This failure results from long-standing poor communication among courts, law enforcement, and the DMV, combined with slow processes and human error in several counties.
  • Several drivers convicted of serious offenses—including Ramon Pacheco, Angie Brey Hamano, and Marvin Salazar—have maintained valid licenses despite legal requirements to suspend their driving privileges for a minimum period following their felony convictions.
  • For example, Hamano’s license remained valid until May 7, 2023, nearly three years after a fatal crash, and Salazar’s license was reissued two months after his May 2023 conviction, illustrating delayed revocation.
  • These reporting failures weaken road safety accountability and have led victims’ families and advocates to demand stricter enforcement of license suspensions following deadly crashes.
Insights by Ground AI
Does this summary seem wrong?

22 Articles

All
Left
4
Center
3
Right
Think freely.Subscribe and get full access to Ground NewsSubscriptions start at $9.99/yearSubscribe

Bias Distribution

  • 57% of the sources lean Left
57% Left
Factuality

To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

Ownership

To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage

KQED broke the news in San Francisco, United States on Saturday, April 19, 2025.
Sources are mostly out of (0)