Kudos to the judge, our court system, organizations like the AMA, and the fellow motorcycle club members who attended the trial!

RIP fellow motorcyclists...

DUI motorist receives life sentence
Bob Reichman
Wednesday, July 13, 2011 at 9:47 am (Updated: July 14, 7:27 am)
An Oxford motorist was sentenced last week to life imprisonment for killing four motorcyclists last year while attempting to pass a slower-moving vehicle.
Paul Sermons, 46, was given four concurrent life sentences last Wednesday when he appeared for sentencing before Circuit Court Judge William Hallman III.
In June, a jury convicted Sermons of DUI manslaughter. The same jury found Sermons innocent on four counts of vehicular homicide.
Sermons was traveling west on County Road 476 on March 13, 2010, in a 1991 GMC pickup when he attempted to pass a 2003 truck being driven by Melissa Pike, then 27, of Floral City.
Sermons’ vehicle struck two oncoming motorcycles carrying four motorcyclists, killing everyone on the bikes.
All four riders were ejected from the bikes and one, a female passenger, crashed into the windshield of the truck that Sermons attempted to pass.
Three of the bikers died at the scene and the fourth, a woman, was flown to a local hospital where she died of her injuries a short time later.
Killed in the accident on a 2003 Harley-Davidson were its operator, John Holmes, 55, of Beverly Hills, and his passenger, Patricia Biehayn, 52, of Hernando County. Aboard the other bike, a 2005 Harley-Davidson, was the driver, William Barker, 54, of Stuart, and his passenger, Patricia Poole, 55, of Mount Dora.
Pike and her passenger Michael Rogers received minor injuries in the accident, according to an FHP accident report.
Members of several motorcycle clubs, notably ABATE, an activist club that campaigns for legislation on behalf of motorcyclists had frequently attended Sermons’ court hearings and his trial.
Following the sentencing, state prosecutor William Catto said he believes the sentence was justified.
“I feel it was a fair sentence under the circumstances,” he said. “It’s a tragedy but it’s fair.
http://www.sumtercountytimes.com/conten ... e-sentence