
A suburban New York man who allowed his unlicensed
15-year-old daughter to drive an SUV that crashed in Pennsylvania's Pocono
Mountains, killing three of her friends, has been sentenced to 16 years in
prison.
Michael Ware, 54, was given a lengthy sentence partly
because he lied to investigators about giving his daughter the keys, allowing
her to shoulder all the blame for the crash.
Wayne County President Judge Ray Hamill branded his behavior 'reckless, stupid and selfish.'
Wayne County President Judge Ray Hamill branded his behavior 'reckless, stupid and selfish.'
He blasted him asking: 'What kind of father does this?'
The crash on August 30, 2014, killed Ryan Lesher, Shamus
Digney and Cullen Keffer, all 15-year-old sophomores at Council Rock High
School in suburban Philadelphia. Three others were hurt.
Ware, who pleaded guilty last month to three counts each of
involuntary manslaughter and reckless endangerment, apologized in a brief
statement.
'I cannot begin to say how sorry I am,' Ware, of Scarsdale,
told the judge. 'Neither I nor my daughter meant any harm to anyone day. May
those boys rest in peace.'

His words rang hollow to the parents of the dead teens. They
spoke in court of their pain and their anger toward Ware, who had allowed his
daughter to drive on several occasions before the crash, including from New
York to their vacation home in Pennsylvania.
'Your desire to be the cool dad devastated an entire
community,' said Ryan's mother, Lisa Lesher
Hamill, his voice rising, repeatedly called Ware's actions
'preventable, irresponsible, reckless, stupid and selfish' and said he had
failed as a father.
Ware's lawyer, Robert Reno, had asked for a sentence of 12
to 23 months. Outside court, he called the sentence 'ridiculous' and said there
would be an appeal.
Prosecutors said Ware allowed his daughter to drive his
Chevrolet Suburban from their Paupack Township home with one of her friends.
She then picked up four boys and drove to a restaurant for breakfast. On the
way back, the teen lost control of the SUV and flipped it.
'He basically gave his daughter a gun and put the bullets in
it for her,' said Wilson Black, Shamus' uncle.



Ware told authorities at the crash scene that his daughter
took the vehicle without permission. The girl backed his story 'so as not to
get him in trouble,' according to court documents.
It wasn't until two months later that one of the passengers
came forward and told police that Ware had given his daughter the keys.
Ware's daughter acknowledged responsibility in juvenile
court to vehicular homicide counts and was placed on indefinite
probation.
She also was ordered to perform 300 hours of community
service, pay restitution and write a 2,000-word essay on the impact of her
crime.
The victims' parents said Ware was not only responsible for
their sons' deaths but had also wrecked his daughter's life.
'You gave her too much independence, too soon,' said Joe
Keffer, Cullen's father. 'You failed to protect her.'
Daily Mail






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