Victim Drana Nikac
As the test results became public yesterday, police commissioner Ray Kelly held a press conference to announce that he had appointed a committee to look into expediting the process of getting warrants for blood from drivers who refuse breath tests. Spellman is the second officer in five weeks to refuse a breath test after a fatal accident; in September Officer Andrew Kelly was arrested after running down Vionique Valnord in Brooklyn. After seven hours, a court-ordered blood test showed no alcohol in his system.
Valnord's family accused the NYPD of covering up Kelly's alleged DWI, but yesterday Commissioner Kelly defended the way both cases were handled, insisting that the average time it takes to get such warrants is about seven hours. (In New York, each county maintains a list of judges who are on call to issue warrants between 1 a.m. and 9 a.m.) An interesting detail about the warrant process for Detective Spellman is revealed by the Times: Before the judge would issue the warrant, he demanded to "speak directly with the doctor who treated the woman who was killed in the crash."
Spellman was suspended and released on $100,000 bond after pleading not guilty to charges of vehicular manslaughter and operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. Yesterday the family of the victim, 67-year-old Bronx grandmother Drane Nikac, held a wake before sending her remains back to her native Albania. Her son-in-law, Noni Juncaj, told the Daily News, "It's sad how she died. Those people should protect us. We look at them not to kill us."




Cops aren't all they're cracked up to be, huh?
In my experience, police "officers" are testosterone-driven egomaniacs with a chip on their shoulder, and NOT keepers of peace.
Good job, NYPD. You're suppose to save us, not kill us.
So sad.
Jesus Christ. If you're that drunk SEVERAL hours later, I don't even know what to say. The blue shield of fuckery can't even protect this guy.
Good.
They forgot to give him the Carbo-Q 2 hours before the test.
"It's sad how she died. Those people should protect us. We look at them not to kill us."
This problem has been questioned for at least two millennia, since ancient Rome. Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Who watches the watchers? Who polices the police?
Foe decades, people in her native Albania asked that same question.