All criminal charges have been held over for trial against a Hatfield Township man accused in the fatal Sept. 14 crash that killed a 72-year-old woman in Franconia Township.
Court records show felony charges of homicide by vehicle while DUI, homicide by vehicle, and related offenses were held for trial against 20-year-old Logan Dierkes, following his preliminary hearing last week in front of Magisterial District Judge Albert Augustine. Dierkes remains free on $99,000 unsecured bail, along with the condition that his driving is restricted to transportation to work.
According to reporting from Carl Hessler Jr. at The Reporter, Dierkes formal arraignment at county court has been scheduled for Jan. 10, at which point a judge will set a date for trial.
Crews were initially dispatched to the scene of a multi-vehicle crash on Mininger Road near the intersection with Milburn Court on Sept. 14 at 5:43 p.m. for a report of a multi-vehicle crash with injuries and entrapment. Arriving police located two vehicles — a Ford Explorer, driven by Paula Ann Wilson, of Bethlehem, and a Dodge Charger, driven by Dierkes — with heavy damage in the roadway.
Citing witness accounts, police said the Dodge was traveling westbound on Mininger Road at a high rate of speed when it struck the Ford, which was exiting a residential driveway. The force of the crash caused the Ford to rollover before coming to rest upright on the side of the road, police said.
Police said Wilson was briefly trapped in the wreckage before being rescued by first responders. She was subsequently transported from the scene via ambulance to Grand View Hospital, where she was pronounced dead at 6:27 p.m.
An autopsy performed on Wilson determined her cause of death to be blunt injuries, and her manner of death to be accidental, officials said.
A 7-year-old female passenger inside of the Ford, who was freed from the vehicle by bystanders, was also transported via ambulance to Grand View Hospital for observation. The girl’s injuries were described in the criminal complaint at "visible scrapes and bruises.”
A small fire ignited in the Dodge following the crash, however it was quickly extinguished by first responders. Dierkes was able to get out of his vehicle on his own and was transported to Grand View Hospital for treatment of a bleeding head wound and other injuries.
A joint investigation between Franconia Police and the Montgomery County Detective Bureau revealed that Dierkes was traveling at such a high rate of speed that the Explorer was found more than 100 feet from the point of impact, police said. Using crash scene reconstruction and surveillance footage of Dierkes traveling on Mininger Road prior to the crash, one estimate showed Dierkes was traveling between 84 and 96 miles per hour, while a known-distance estimate based of the framerate of surveillance footage showed Dierkes speed to be between 90 and 97 miles per hour, according to charging documents.
Mininger Road has a posted speed limit of 35 miles per hour between Elroy and Cowpath roads, which encompasses the site of the crash.
A blood sample obtained from Dierkes revealed he had used marijuana within three hours of the crash, and Dierkes allegedly told investigators that he smokes marijuana on a regular basis, police said. A post-crash inspection of Dierkes vehicle concluded that there were no mechanical issues that contributed to the crash, though it did note there was an aftermarket steering wheel and the airbags had been disconnected.
"Our sympathies go out the family and friends of Paula Wilson, a grandma who was tragically killed doing something as ordinary as pulling out of a residential driveway. Thankfully, her 7-year-old granddaughter survived,” said Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele. "This fatal crash was caused by the defendant’s recklessness—driving 50 miles per hour over the speed limit while under the influence of marijuana. We will seek to hold him accountable for his actions.”
The case is being prosecuted by Montgomery County Assistant District Attorney Edward McCann Jr., and Dierkes is being represented by William E. Moore Esq. from the Colmar-based Rubin, Glickman, Steinberg & Gifford law firm.
If convicted of homicide by vehicle while DUI, Dierkes would face a minimum of three years and a maximum of 10 years in prison, along with a fine of up to $25,000.
All suspects and defendants are innocent until proven guilty. This story was compiled using information provided by the Transportation Safety Administration.
See also:
Hatfield Man Charged with Homicide by Vehicle While DUI in Fatal Franconia Township Crash
Investigation Continues into Fatal Crash on Mininger Road in Franconia
One Killed, Multiple Injured in Multi-Vehicle Crash in Franconia Thursday Afternoon