Friends, Family Of Kristal Walsh ‘Devastated’ By Sentence
bristol teens
bristol teens
By Earl Neikirk/Bristol Herald Courier
Jonathan Walsh, Brenda Walsh and Wendy Steelman talk about sentencing of two teenagers Wednesday in the death of Kristal Walsh who was killed in March when a truck hit her house. SOUND-OFF: Do you think the punishment fits the crime? Who should be held accountable for the teens role in the accident?
BRISTOL, Tenn. – About 20 family members and friends of the late Kristal Walsh said they were devastated Wednesday when they learned the two teenagers found guilty of vehicular homicide in Walsh’s death would not serve time behind bars.
Instead, Juvenile Court Judge Paul Wohlford placed the teenagers on probation, and ordered them to perform 250 hours of community service and pay for any future counseling for Walsh’s now 4-year-old child, Cheyenne.
Wohlford turned down a request earlier this week by the Herald Courier to attend the sentencing. Juvenile court proceedings often are closed.
A grandmother of the girl who drove the truck that killed Walsh said it was a child’s mistake that her 15-year-old granddaughter will pay for the rest of her life.
Walsh’s family and friends were sobbing and clinging to each other as they exited a packed conference room after the sentencing.
“This is a shame to focus on the rehabilitation of the juveniles when my sister is under 6 feet of dirt,” said a weeping Jonathan Walsh, the victim’s brother who traveled from Statesboro, Ga., for the sentencing. “It’s a massive miscarriage of justice.”
When asked what Kristal Walsh would have said about the sentence were she able, the group’s mood took a quick turn.
“You wouldn’t want to know,” her brother said.
Kristal Walsh, 34, was napping on her couch inside her home with a case of the flu March 2 when a truck veered off the road at the intersection of Hazlewood Street and Carolina Avenue. Police found her body under a pile of rubble after a fire started by the crash was extinguished.
The Herald Courier typically does not name juveniles convicted of crimes, but decided Wednesday that the severity of this crime and the juveniles’ ages warrant their identification. The newspaper’s decision was backed by the leading ethics expert at the Poynter Institute for journalists in St. Petersburg, Fla.
The names of the juveniles are listed on a police report provided to the newspaper by the victim’s sister, Wendy Steelman.
Rebecca Tippner, a 15-year-old who was driving the truck that killed Walsh, and passenger Eric Artrip, then 17 and now 18, were adjudicated as delinquents and found guilty in July of vehicular homicide and leaving the scene of an accident.
Artrip was charged with the same crimes as Tippner, even though police identified her as the driver. Prosecutors said the boy “aided and abetted” the underage driver and that the truck belonged to his family.
Before Wednesday’s sentencing, Walsh’s family members – wearing buttons with a picture of Kristal and her daughter, Cheyenne, on their shirts – wrung their hands and were visibly nervous.
After the decision, they met in the parking lot in preparation for a pilgrimage to the accident site, where a memorial stands in place of the demolished home.
“I thought the sentence would be tougher,” Steelman said. “They won’t be serving any time. It’s unbelievable.”
Barry Staubus, Sullivan County assistant district attorney, said Jonathan Walsh and Wendy Steelman were allowed to read “very emotional” statements to the judge before the sentence was handed down.
“Unfortunately, we cannot appeal the decision,” Staubus said after the sentencing. “In this case, only the juveniles can appeal.”
As a term of their probation, Tippner will be under house arrest until she reaches her 18th birthday; Artrip will remain under house arrest until his 19th birthday. Both juveniles have been under house arrest since being charged in May.
“She [Tippner] can still go to school and to do community service, but she will be under the guardianship of her grandparents until she is 18,” said attorney David Tipton, of Tipton & Jones, the firm that represented the girl. “I think the judge made the decision he felt was proper.”
Tippner’s grandmother, Patricia Tippner, said the juveniles’ families view Walsh’s death as a terrible accident and feel sorry for her family.
“A 15-year-old girl made a couple of bad errors, and she’s going to suffer for it the rest of her life,” Patricia Tipper said.
Neither Artrip’s family members nor his attorney, Lynn Dougherty, of Hudson, Dougherty & Seeley, could be reached for comment Wednesday.
In April city crews repaired a portion of guardrail that runs alongside the lot where Walsh’s home used to sit. Before the repairs, the guardrail did not extend to the stop sign placed near the apex of the intersection – the gap that allowed the truck to slam Walsh’s home.
Traffic counters also have been placed at four points about 40 feet before and after the intersection on the two roads.
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Reader Reactions
If the girl was on;y 15 why was she driving to begin with ? She should have been punished for that. IT’s my own opinion, but I think that 16 is way too young to drive anyways. I think it should be a law that you can’t drive until you are 18 years old. This little 15 year old girl is just young and she has no sense of responsibility at all, she is probably spoiled and living in a fantasy world. This woman was in her home ( where we should be safe ) suffering with the flu and had no idea what was going to be her very last day of living. This little girl should have been punished for her mistake, how are our children going to learn anything when they can get away with everything?
Even murder !
Let’s just hope when she does it again,and she will it’s the Judges family who suffers the loss. Judges around here are too damn liberal.
Oh my goodness again a PICTURE of the JUDICIAL system here in Tennesse.How can YOU judges justify what YOU do when our Law Enforcement put their lives on the line for the such as these 2 teenagers???This child will never have a mother to raise her child,did you have a mother????
a few thoughts…. to the question regarding her parents… they are in jail. She is being raised by her grandparents. As to her observed behavior while in the police car… that is a very good indication of her feelings and personality. While she has laughed and commented to others about how drunk she was that night, we have yet to hear her say she is sorry for her actions. As to her being under house arrest, thats a joke. Her life has NOT changed one bit. Furthermore, this is not that first time she has been in trouble with the police. Maybe being held accountable for this would have been the catalyst she needed to change. As it stands, she is a spoiled brat who thinks she is entitled to live her life as she pleases and has absolutely no concern/respect for others nor for how her actions effect others.
The Judge should be very ashamed of this decision and I wonder how her attorney can sleep at night.
This is just totally wrong
I would also that i agree with SLittle on this one, and i beg to differ with nuff said in the comment left on the column about the child needing counseling, you have to know this family before you go to assume that they are telling this child that bad people killed her mother.. now please… in this family they are not like that, and they only want whats best for the child.They would not belittle theirselves they level that you want them to seem. They are far from that and to say that they are going to take advantage of that. As you are saying in the email about their punishment. Thank God for the Judge for thinking of the lttle girl, i believe it was on his suggestion. I have also seen this little girl say also that her mom is in heaven, so if she needs to go counseling, lets think that one day she had a home, and she went to stay all night with her dad. Poof she wants to go home, where is it, burned to the ground. She lost her mother and her safe home where she lived with her mother. So yeah, that would emotionally scar a child. I really for sorry fot the Walsh’s, my family. I lvoe them more than anything. Seeing them go through this ordeal has been a nigtmare. I would beg to also differ with the girls grandmother on her statement. It was a horrible accident that she will never get over. Lets hope not.
I have read so many of these and it really saddens me that people look at them as being “children”. They were old enough to make the decision to go out that night and drink. I stood their watching her house burn, knowing she was in it. Watching her child’s father just stand there helpless and cry. Her mother and sister watching. I was horrified, and as I looked behind me there was that “poor kid” sitting in the back of the police car with the most uncaring look on her face. No tears, no fear, no remorse. She just watched the house go up in flames with no remorse. It wasnt that she was in shock. As she looked over and saw me looking at her she even went as far as to roll her eyes. Thats the Gods honest truth. Directly after that, the female officer drove her off somewhere else. I have heard that child beg for her mother. I have seen her go outside and blow a dandelion and say “I wish my mom would come back and play with me”. Everytime she goes outside, she looks at the sky. So, don’t feel so awful for these “kids”. They knew just what they were doing, and still have not offered to appologize one time to any of these people. Yes I will say they didn’t get enough punishment. Kristal’s family will have to live with this for the rest of their lives. Chy will never have the opportunity to have her mom be there for any important event. On those days she will still be missing her. And when she gets older and understands how it was she died and the outcome, that will be more for her to live with. Since its so easy for some to say the teens have been punished enough, ask yourselves are they even sorry? If so are they sorry for the family or themselves? I hope that their guardians also realize if they could’ve controlled their kids and been a decent enough parent, they wouldn’t have let them stay out that late anyhow, and none of this would have happened. Pray for the family. This has been a very hurtful event.
I don’t know any of the parties involved. I have nothing but deepest sympathy for the family of the victim and wish the best for them in the future. But these were teenagers, of course they didn’t stay after the accident, they are young, and were scared, I presume. It was wrong of them, but it was an indication of their age and immaturity. What some people have said and posted here will not be helpful to the teenagers. They have the opportunity now to turn their lives around and make them better. Yes, I know the victim and family do not have this second chance. If it were my family member I would be just as upset. Would the victim have said to kill them as she was killed, would she have asked for revenge? I didn’t know her, I don’t know. Having teenagers today is not an easy thing, you must be on top of it all the time, there is just so much out there to distract and mislead them. Not that it matters, but I think the sentence was fair considering their age and hopefully they will have learned a life lesson from this. They can now go forward and become better human beings. There is a reason for everything. And the fact that they must pay for counseling for this 4 year old will probably be costly—it will probably be taken advantage of since I fear the family members will be telling this little innocent the rest of her life about the bad people who took her mother away. I hope this does not happen, that this child will not be undermined by such an action.
I think “children” are allowed to get their licenses too young. At that age, they don’t have the maturity and common sense needed for such responsibility.
Too, parents use no discretion in limiting their driving, If they don’t lower the driving age, it’s past time that they limit the hours that they’re allowed to drive.
Parking lots at hight schools are full of cars when buses run by their homes. They should try riding bus, they might like it. Too, I feel that lots of the drugs are distributed in the school parking lots.
An Adult is an Adult and a Child is a Juvenile.The sentence was fair.
THIS IS IN NO WAY PUNISHMENT FOR THE CRIME THEY COMMITTED. THEY DID SOMETHING THAT CAN NOT BE UNDONE BY COMMUNITY SERVICE. THIS LITTLE GIRL WILL NEVER HAVE HER MOTHER BESIDE HER GROWING UP BECAUSE OF SOMETHING THEY THOUGHT MIGHT BE FUN. THEY HAD NO REGARDS TO WHAT MIGHT HAPPEN. THESE KIDS WILL NOT LEARN FROM THIS PUNISHMENT.



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