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Sunday, February 24, 2013
Southampton Man Faces Involuntary Manslaughter Charge in Teen Drug Overdose Death
Luke Edward Bonhage, 22, is facing an involuntary manslaughter charge in connection with the death of a teen.
At Luke Edward Bonhage’s preliminary hearing Thursday in Richboro,
Assistant District Attorney Chris Rees withdrew felony charges of drug
delivery resulting in death, criminal trespassing and a misdemeanor
charge of possession of a controlled substance.
However, the 22-year-old Upper Southampton man waived his right to a full preliminary hearing and is now set to face a new misdemeanor charge of involuntary manslaughter when his case is heard at county court in Doylestown.
Before the drug delivery resulting in death charge was withdrawn, Bonhage was the first person in Bucks County be charged with that offense, according to the prosecution.
Bonhage is charged in connection to the death of a 19-year-old woman who was found unresponsive on the couch in his parent’s home on Dennis Road in December 2011. It is believed by authorities that she suffered an adverse reaction to prescription drugs Bonhage gave her, according to a report from PhillyBurbs.com
The PhillyBurbs report detailed the following chain of events in regards to the day of the incident:
The drug delivery resulting in death legislation was introduced by State Representative Bernie O’Neill, whose district covers parts of Buckingham, New Hope, Upper Southampton, Warminster, Warwick, and signed into law by Governor Tom Corbett in July of last year.
Prior to the new law, prosecutors had to prove malice when charging a drug dealer in connection with the death of a victim who expired after taking a substance they were given or sold.
With the new law, all prosecutors have to do is prove that the drug dealer provided the substance that killed the victim.
After the hearing let out, Robert Mancini, Bonhage's hired defense attorney, and ADA Rees would not comment on the amendments to the charges.
It is unclear whether the change in charges was due to a plea deal.
Bonhage is currently out of prison on $20,000 unsecured bail for the charges connected with the woman’s death, and $5,000 related to his DUI charges.
Related Topics:
Luke Edward Bonhage, Police, Upper Southampton Police Department, and bernie o'neill
However, the 22-year-old Upper Southampton man waived his right to a full preliminary hearing and is now set to face a new misdemeanor charge of involuntary manslaughter when his case is heard at county court in Doylestown.
Before the drug delivery resulting in death charge was withdrawn, Bonhage was the first person in Bucks County be charged with that offense, according to the prosecution.
Bonhage is charged in connection to the death of a 19-year-old woman who was found unresponsive on the couch in his parent’s home on Dennis Road in December 2011. It is believed by authorities that she suffered an adverse reaction to prescription drugs Bonhage gave her, according to a report from PhillyBurbs.com
The PhillyBurbs report detailed the following chain of events in regards to the day of the incident:
Text messages between Bonhage and the 19-year-old victim show the duo went to a lot on Jaymor Road, where Bonhage’s car was impounded, due to a DUI arrest earlier in the day, and jumped a fence. Once in the lot, the 22-year-old retrieved prescription drugs from his car.An autopsy conducted by the Bucks County coroner ruled the woman’s death was caused by a drug overdose.
The victim and Bonhage spent a portion of the night of December 4, 2011 smoking marijuana and snorting crushed prescription pills. The victim began to have a bad reaction and was carried to the couch where she was found dead the next morning.
The drug delivery resulting in death legislation was introduced by State Representative Bernie O’Neill, whose district covers parts of Buckingham, New Hope, Upper Southampton, Warminster, Warwick, and signed into law by Governor Tom Corbett in July of last year.
Prior to the new law, prosecutors had to prove malice when charging a drug dealer in connection with the death of a victim who expired after taking a substance they were given or sold.
With the new law, all prosecutors have to do is prove that the drug dealer provided the substance that killed the victim.
After the hearing let out, Robert Mancini, Bonhage's hired defense attorney, and ADA Rees would not comment on the amendments to the charges.
It is unclear whether the change in charges was due to a plea deal.
Bonhage is currently out of prison on $20,000 unsecured bail for the charges connected with the woman’s death, and $5,000 related to his DUI charges.
Prescription drug abuse destroys lives with death and crime - News - The Times-Tribune
Children More Likely to Accept Drug Use if Parents Admit Past Substance Use
By Join Together Staff |
February 22, 2013 |
Leave a comment | Filed in
Alcohol, Drugs, Parenting & Youth
Middle school students are less likely to think using drugs
is bad if their parents told them about their own past substance use, a
new study finds. Children whose parents warned them not to use drugs
were more likely to avoid them, ABC News reports.
The study by researchers at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign included 561 middle school students. They were less
likely to accept drug use if their parents set rules against drugs, and
told them about people who have gotten into trouble because of drugs.
“Parents should really hit on what are the bad things that can
happen, health-wise, from using drugs,” researcher Jennifer Kam told ABC
News. ”They should really clearly tell kids that they disapprove of
them using drugs. Also, give them strategies to avoid use or decline use
in a way that makes them look cool.”
She advised parents against lying. “I wouldn’t volunteer the
information, but if a child asks, and a parent lies, it could impact the
relationship later on,” she noted.
The study appears in the journal Human Communication Research.
Can the Lizard King Come Back Clean? | The Fix
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