Jury finds man guilty in Two Medicine DUI fatality
A federal jury last week convicted an East Glacier Park man accused of killing one passenger and seriously injuring a second passenger after he had been drinking and driving and crashed in Glacier National Park last year, U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme said.
The jury found Leo James Hagan, 19, guilty of involuntary manslaughter and of assault resulting in serious bodily injury.
Killed in the wreck was 40-year-old Paul Cadotte of Starr School, a passenger in Hagan’s rig.
Hagan faces a maximum eight years in prison, a $250,000 fine and three years of supervised release on the manslaughter charge and a maximum 10 years in prison, a $250,000 fine and three years of supervised release on the assault charge.
U.S. District Judge Brian M. Morris presided. Judge Morris set sentencing for June 3 and continued Hagan’s release.
“Drinking and driving often ends tragically. We will prosecute those who do so to the full extent of the law to ensure that we keep our national parks safe. I want to thank Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kalah Paisley and Ethan Plaut, along with the National Park Service, Blackfeet Law Enforcement Services and Medical Services, the Glacier County Sheriff’s Office and the Montana Highway Patrol for investigating and prosecuting this case,” Alme said.
The crash occurred on June 11, 2019, on the Two Medicine Road, near Lower Two Medicine Lake, about 200 yards inside of Glacier National Park. Hagan, and the two passengers had been socializing at the Trailhead Saloon in East Glacier that night, and Hagan had consumed alcohol. The three left the saloon and traveled toward Two Medicine Lake with Hagan driving a Ford Escape. One passenger was in the front seat and one passenger was in the rear seat.
Hagan lost control of the vehicle, failed to negotiate a sharp left turn, went off the road and hit a tree. The vehicle spun and rolled and came to rest on the driver’s side. The front seat passenger was ejected and suffered severe injuries.
Cadotte, who is the back, was also ejected, pinned under the vehicle and died at the scene.
Hagan, the prosecution said, traveled on foot back toward his residence and called 911 on his cell phone. He reported there had been a crash and implied that he had come upon the scene and was otherwise not involved. He reported seeing one injured person but not his involvement, the cause or that a passenger had died.
The Glacier County Sheriff’s Office responded to the 911 call but struggled to find the scene initially because of the vague description Hagan had provided to the dispatcher. While looking for the crash, a deputy spotted a man, later identified as Hagan, walking along the road. Hagan did not try to flag down the marked vehicle. Deputies found the crash scene about two minutes later.
The injured passenger told officers there had been three people in the vehicle, which prompted law enforcement to look for Hagan.
A Blackfeet Law Enforcement Services officer found Hagan at his residence at about 2:30 a.m., and Hagan confirmed he had been in the crash. Hagan admitted he had been driving and refused medical treatment. A Montana Highway Patrol trooper began a drunken driving investigation, and Hagan admitted to a Park Service ranger that he had been driving and that the group had been drinking at the bar.
Hagan told law enforcement that the front seat passenger had put him in a headlock while he was driving and that he was traveling at 30 mph. Hagan was eventually transported to the Indian Health Service where a blood draw determined his blood alcohol level was .093 percent.
The injured passenger told law enforcement that nobody was “horsing around” in the vehicle, but that he also did not remember most of the events of that night.
A crash investigation determined that the vehicle was traveling more than 70 mph in a 45 mph speed zone when it crashed, that Hagan never applied the brakes and that neither Hagan nor the front passenger was wearing a seatbelt. Hagan had claimed he was wearing a seatbelt and had braked.