Georgia mayor, ex-trooper found guilty of vehicular homicide

by Staff

ATLANTA, Ga. - A west Georgia mayor has been found guilty of vehicular homicide and several other charges related to a 2015 crash that killed two teenagers and injured two others while he was a state trooper.

A.J. Scott, currently the mayor of Buchanan, was found guilty of one count of second-degree vehicular homicide, two counts of serious injury by vehicle and speeding.

Scott was acquitted of a second count of second-degree vehicular homicide.

He was also found guilty of a sixth charge that the jury did not specify. The other charges he faced were reckless driving and violation of oath by a public officer.

He will be sentenced at a later date.

Jurors delivered the verdict around 5:20 p.m. Wednesday, a day after they began deliberating.

>> Watch the verdict being read below:

The verdict was reached Wednesday in the retrial of a west Georgia mayor and former state trooper related to a crash that killed two teenagers.

Scott stood accused of causing a crash that killed two teenage girls in 2015 while he was a state trooper.

Scott is currently the mayor of Buchanan, a small city that is the county seat of Haralson County, Georgia. He was elected in 2019 and has been reelected since.

Scott was originally tried in 2019, but a judge declared a mistrial because the district attorney’s office allegedly withheld evidence.

According to prosecutors, Scott was driving around 90 mph without his lights or sirens activated when the crash happened. Kylie Lindsey, 17, and Isabella Chinchilla, 16, died from their injuries.

The girls were in the backseat of a Nissan Altima. Two other teenagers, Dillon Wall and Ben Finken, were sitting in the front, where they also suffered injuries.

Scott was fired from the state patrol after the accident. Prosecutors argued Scott was speeding and not responding to an emergency.

Closing arguments began Tuesday morning, and the jury began deliberations soon afterward.

Scott himself took the stand on Monday, telling the jury that on the night of the crash, he was driving toward Bremen to pick up his body-worn radio from another officer who had offered to charge the device’s dead battery.

Prosecutors asked Scott if he saw the speed limit signs posted on Highway 27 signaling drivers should slow from 55 mph to 45 mph when approaching a hill.

“No,” he said, acknowledging he was not headed to an emergency call and did not have his emergency lights and sirens activated.

Meanwhile, the defense argued the teens had been drinking, contributing to the crash. Defense attorneys also asked Judge Erica Tisinger for a directed verdict, a ruling from the judge that takes a case away from the jury and enters judgment for one party, which Tisinger twice rejected.

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