A woman who ran a stop sign in Carlsbad and fatally struck a mother who was riding an e-bike with her toddler daughter was sentenced Thursday to 90 days in county jail and 90 days of house arrest.
Lindsay Turmelle, 43, pleaded guilty in Vista Superior Court to misdemeanor vehicular manslaughter for the Aug. 7, 2022, crash that killed Christine Embree, 35.
Embree was riding with her 16-month-old daughter when Turmelle’s Toyota 4-Runner struck her near the intersection of Basswood Avenue and Valley Street.
Embree died at a hospital a day later. Her daughter was not injured.
Defense attorney Joni Eisenstein said her client was driving home from work and glanced down for a moment, leading to the fatal crash.
“It’s a mistake Ms. Turmelle made that she can never take back and she has been waiting since the day of the incident to apologize,” said Eisenstein. She described her client as “consumed with remorse and regret.”
In a statement delivered in court, Turmelle said she has already scheduled public speaking events at schools and other places where she intends to talk about her experience and warn others of the dangers of distracted driving.
She told Embree’s family, “I cannot imagine what this has been like for you. I pray for your comfort. I pray for you to heal. I pray for your understanding and I’ve prayed for your forgiveness. I cannot compare what I am going through to what your family endures daily.”
Deputy District Attorney Kaleb Fulbright sought the maximum possible sentence for misdemeanor vehicular manslaughter, which is one year in county jail.
The prosecutor alleged that after the crash, Turmelle told police that she had fully stopped at the stop sign, something he characterized as a “blatant lie” that was later disproven by traffic data obtained from her vehicle.
He also said Turmelle had a history of traffic accidents and violations, which included running a red light about three months before the fatal crash.
Fulbright said that should have made her more cognizant of the dangers of driving while distracted.
“The defendant thought that whatever it was she was doing at the time, whatever it was that was distracting her, was more important than simple safety of the road,’’ Fulbright said.
Superior Court Judge Alejandro Morales agreed that Turmelle’s driving history should have put her on notice.
However, he noted that she has been “extremely remorseful,” has attempted to make amends by speaking about her experience and said he believed “society is better served” by having her dissuade others with her story, rather than sending her to jail for one year.
The judge ordered Turmelle to report to court in February, when she will be taken into custody to begin serving her jail sentence. Morales said he delayed the start of her custody because Turmelle has some of those speaking engagements planned this month.
Along with custody, she will be required to speak at 10 traffic-school events and complete 50 hours of volunteer work.
The crash was one of two fatal bicyclist collisions during the month of August 2022 in Carlsbad. Those crashes, coupled with a spike in e-bike and bicycle collisions citywide led Carlsbad officials to declare a local state of emergency last year.