• Re: Whore Rebecca Grossman was impaired before deadly crash, investigat

    From LA Democrat prostitutes@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 10 18:51:07 2024
    XPost: alt.los-angeles, alt.deadmolly.woodchipper, talk.politics.misc
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    On 08 Apr 2022, Rightists Abort Babies <udyr7615@gmail.com> posted some news:t2p62q$3pet1$1@news.freedyn.de:

    Put the entitled whore in prison so her husband can divorce her
    unfaithful cunt.

    On the same night two young boys were killed in a Westlake crosswalk,
    Rebecca Grossman had a cocktail.

    Court documents show that the L.A. socialite also had Valium in her
    system. That drug had an “additive” effect on the alcohol, impairing her judgment, and she later barreled into the two children, an expert
    witness and prosecutors maintained Monday at her murder trial.

    People who “have one beer plus Valium, that may feel like five beers,”
    the Los Angeles district attorney’s drug recognition expert, Det.
    Michael Takacs, told jurors Monday.

    Defense attorney Tony Buzbee immediately objected, noting that the
    amount of Valium was “unknown.” He says the amount was minuscule.

    Grossman, 60, is charged with two counts of second-degree murder, two
    counts of vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence and one count of hit-and-run driving resulting in death. Prosecutors say after having
    cocktails with her then-lover, former Dodgers pitcher Scott Erickson,
    Grossman went on to speed dangerously and crashed into the boys as they
    crossed Triunfo Canyon Road behind their mother. Prosecutors have told
    jurors she drove as fast as 81 mph before hitting Mark and Jacob
    Iskander, 11 and 8, on Sept. 29, 2020.

    A breathalyzer at the scene of the incident showed Grossman to have a
    blood alcohol level of about 0.075%; a blood test three hours later came
    back at 0.08%. California’s legal limit is 0.08%.

    Takacs testified that a blood alcohol level like Grossman’s would result
    in signs of impairment. He said she also tested positive for diazepam or Valium, a psychoactive that acts on the central nervous system and is a depressant like alcohol.

    Prosecutor Ryan Gould asked Takacs to explain how Valium can interact
    with alcohol. “It creates what you call an additive effect,” Takacs
    said.

    Vanessa Meneses, supervising senior forensic scientist at the Orange
    County Crime Laboratory, testified that criminalists in the lab
    reexamined Grossman’s blood sample and found caffeine; norfluoxetine fluoxetine, commonly sold under the name Prozac; and nordiazepam, a
    metabolite of Valium. The blood alcohol level, which is tested twice,
    was 0.074% and 0.073%. It is not unusual, she said, when a blood sample
    is opened multiple times for it to lose ethanol content, much like a
    soda bottle opened multiple times loses its fizz. Asked by Deputy Dist.
    Atty. Jamie Castro what effect Valium would have when added to alcohol,
    Meneses echoed Takacs, referring to its additive effect.

    Although Grossman is not charged with driving under the influence,
    prosecutors are alleging her reckless behavior amounts to implied
    malice, a requirement for them to prove second degree murder.

    Under cross-examination from Buzbee, the investigator acknowledged that
    Valium was not found in Grossman’s purse or in the white Mercedes SUV
    she was driving that night, and that the drug could show up in her
    system even if she had taken it days earlier.

    A criminalist with the L.A. County Crime Lab testified that Grossman
    tested positive for benzodiazepines — of which Valium is a type — but
    the criminalist could not say how much.

    While questioning Takacs, Buzbee repeatedly referred to the amount of
    Valium in Grossman’s blood as minuscule. “I don’t know if it is a trace amount,” the investigator countered.

    Takacs told prosecutors that he saw signs of impairment in video of
    Grossman’s field sobriety test administered after the deadly crash —
    although he said the test was replete with errors. Last week, L.A.
    County Sheriff’s Deputy Michael Kelley admitted under cross-examination
    by the defense that errors were made in administering the test.

    Takacs said signs of impairment during the test included Grossman taking
    nine steps instead of eight and swaying during the one-leg-stand test.
    He said she also kept her eyes open on the finger-to-nose test.

    But the investigator said he was basing his assessment on “the entire
    picture,” including her behavior after her vehicle stopped after the
    incident, disabled by its safety system. A deputy previously testified
    that Grossman said “she did not know what was going on. She said she hit something, but she didn’t know what she hit.”

    According to court testimony, Grossman and former Dodgers player
    Erickson, 55, had been drinking cocktails at a restaurant before the
    crash. They were with retired baseball player Royce Clayton, who
    testified previously that Erickson drank two margaritas and Grossman
    one. He said Grossman did not seem to be impaired when she left the
    eatery.

    Buzbee, Grossman’s lead attorney, has argued throughout the trial that
    it was a black 2016 Mercedes AMG SUV driven by Erickson — not his
    client’s white Mercedes SUV — that first struck the children. He also
    alleged to jurors that Erickson hid in some nearby bushes after the
    crash and watched the aftermath of the incident unfold.

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-02-06/rebecca-grossman-alco hol-valium-impaired-investigator-testifies

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