Home Crime Probation revoked for ex-elected official over deadly crash

Probation revoked for ex-elected official over deadly crash

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Dee Ann Haney appears in two booking photos.

Inset left: Dee Ann Haney (Galveston County Sheriff”s Office). Inset right: Haney in another booking photo (Texas City Police Department).

A Texas woman and onetime elected official will spend significant time behind bars for violating the terms of her probation after being found responsible for a deadly crash that killed a father and son.

During the early morning hours on July 3, 2017, Dee Ann Haney, 63, crashed her Ford F-150 into a Toyota Tacoma near the Galveston Causeway Bridge – killing Duoc Van Le, 58, and Hong Phuc Le, 33.

In February 2024, after being convicted of two counts of criminally negligent homicide, Haney received 10 years of probation.

“Of course, we’re disappointed with that,” a prosecutor told Houston-based ABC affiliate KTRK last year. “We felt that prison was the appropriate punishment for a case like this given the harm that she’s done to the Le family and our community.”

Now, a bit belatedly, the state is getting its request fulfilled.

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During the initial incident, Haney was traveling northbound in the far right lane of Interstate 45 in the small Gulf Coast city, according to police report obtained by Houston-based The CW affiliate KIAH. The Le family had stopped on the shoulder to tie down a piece of plexiglass that came loose when Haney’s pickup went through the left lane, entered the shoulder, and slammed into them.

“She showed signs of smoking marijuana, and she admitted to smoking marijuana,” Galveston Police Capt. Joshua Schirard said at the time, in comments to KIAH.

Lab test results, however, showed no significant levels of THC in the defendant’s bloodstream, authorities later acknowledged.

Haney’s six-year criminal case would culminate in 8 1/2 hours of jury deliberations, probation, a $10,000 fine and more or less symbolic jail time to be served one day per year on the anniversary of the crash until 2027.

She would only get the chance to serve one of those symbolic days in jail before her arrest again in September 2024.

On Sept. 27, 2024, at around 4 a.m., Haney was arrested after being reported by a witness who said the former commissioner-at-large for Texas City was driving erratically and slurring her speech, according to court documents obtained by Houston-based NBC affiliate KPRC.

This time around, after refusing a breathalyzer, the defendant was charged with DWI by the Texas City Police Department.

When arrested, Haney said she was chasing several people who had attacked her earlier that night, police claim. The witness, on the other hand, said they saw the defendant all by her lonesome, near a park, screaming into the night and rolling around on the ground.

Responding officers said the defendant admittedly had taken her daily medications, absent her nightly dose, and earlier in the night drank one beer and one shot. Police believed her drinking likely exceeded that amount – and accused Haney of having alcohol on her breath, slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, and poor balance.

Now, after a two-day trial, the defendant’s probation has been revoked.

On Friday, 122nd Judicial District Court Judge Jeth Jones said Haney had received a second chance when jurors opted for probation.

“I’m not giving you a third,” the judge intoned. “You don’t seem to have ever taken this seriously.”

Now, Haney will have to spend the next 10 years of her life in state prison. But it was not the second driving incident alone that put her there.

The defendant also failed to complete mandatory community service, authorities alleged. In court documents obtained by KTRK, Haney was supposed to perform 16 hours of such service per week.

“She wasn’t successful at completing the technical obligations of her probation,” Galveston County Chief Assistant Criminal District Attorney Kacey Launius told KTRK. “Completing community service hours is such an easy thing to do, and she simply was not doing that.”

Haney was first elected to the Texas City Commission in 2004; she did not resign after the fatal crash, but lost a re-election bid in 2018.

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