The driver in a Castine car crash that killed four students at Maine Maritime Academy was indicted Friday on 17 criminal charges by a Hancock County grand jury.
Joshua Goncalves-Radding, 20, has been charged with four counts of manslaughter in connection with the crash. The students who died were Brian Kenealy, 20, of York, Chase Fossett, 21, of Gardiner, Luke Simpson, 22, of Rockport, Massachusetts, and Riley Ignacio-Cameron, 20, of Aquinnah, Massachusetts.
Goncalves-Radding, who is from North Babylon, New York, and two other MMA students who were in the 2013 Range Rover survived the crash. It occurred on Dec. 10 just after 2 a.m. as the vehicle was traveling south on Route 166 when it left the roadway and hit a tree before “erupting into flames,” Maine State Police spokesperson Shannon Moss said at the time.
Goncalves-Radding also was indicted Friday on five counts of aggravated criminal OUI, two counts of reckless conduct with a dangerous weapon, three counts of driving to endanger and one count each of criminal speed, forgery and unlawful use of license.
Of the 17 total charges, 13 are classified as felonies.
The indictment is the first public acknowledgement that police believe alcohol played a role in the deadly crash.
Four of the aggravated criminal OUI charges are Class B felonies and one of the aggravated criminal OUI charges is a Class C felony. Convictions for Class B crimes in Maine are punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000, while those for Class C crimes are punishable by up to five years incarceration and a $5,000 fine.
Manslaughter is a Class A crime that, with a conviction, carries a possible sentence of up to 30 years in prison and a fine of up to $50,000.
The crash in Castine is believed to be the deadliest crash that has been prosecuted in Maine in nearly 30 years.
In 1994, a Baileyville man and his three children died when the Volkswagen Beetle he was driving collided head-on with another vehicle on Route 1 in Baring. The driver of the other vehicle later was charged with four counts of manslaughter.
Thirty years ago, four teenagers died on the Maine turnpike when a tractor trailer drifted into the breakdown lane and struck a Ford Escort that had stopped by the side of the highway in Falmouth. The truck driver in that case, Pennsylvania resident Robert Hornbarger, was not charged with manslaughter but pleaded guilty to falsifying his log book — a crime for which he served 98 days in jail.
Maine’s deadliest-ever accident, which did not result in criminal charges being filed, occurred in 2002 when 14 migrant forestry workers from Central America drowned after a van they were riding in drove off a one-lane bridge into a lake on the Allagash Wilderness Waterway. Only one passenger survived after escaping out the rear window of the sinking van.