Skip to Content

Arraignment postponed for trucker accused in woman’s death on I-10

Arraignment was postponed Wednesday for a trucker accused of plowing through a coned-off crash scene on Interstate 10, killing a woman who rescuers were trying to remove from her overturned car.

Robbie Macias, 53, of Plumas Lake, is now slated to be arraigned June 28 on a vehicular manslaughter charge and remains free on his own recognizance. It was the second resettling of his arraignment date.

Macias is accused in a Feb. 7, 2016 crash that killed 56-year-old Maria Vera on eastbound Interstate 10, west of Jefferson Street. Authorities allege Macias was traveling at unsafe speeds considering the cordoned-off crash site and did not attempt to steer around Vera’s car prior to the crash.

Read: Lawyer says trucker shouldn’t have been charged in woman’s death

Vera was involved in a 7 a.m. solo crash that left her Volkswagen Jetta overturned. Her passengers were able to escape, but Vera was pinned inside the car and unable to move her left leg, according to a declaration in support of an arrest warrant.

As California Highway Patrol officers and Riverside County firefighters were attempting to remove Vera from the car, traffic was diverted through one lane, with cones set up along the freeway blocking all but the fast lane.

Macias allegedly drove his big rig through the cone pattern at 60 to 65 miles per hour and into the Volkswagen with Vera still trapped inside. The truck was skidding with smoking tires prior to striking the car, but Macias
told investigators he then released the brakes to avoid “spinning out,” according to the declaration.

More Crime Headlines around the Coachella Valley

Two CHP officers had to dive over the concrete center divider “head first” in order to avoid being struck by Macias, the declaration alleges.

Vera died at the scene. Macias was taken to a hospital with minor injuries and complaints of pain but was not arrested in connection with the crash.

A misdemeanor count of vehicular manslaughter without gross negligence was not filed against Macias until Feb. 2, 2017. He remains free on his own recognizance.

Macias’ attorney, Christopher DeSalva, said last month that his client should never have been charged for what he said was “an accident, period.”

“He was driving reasonably. He violated no law. He was not the cause of the accident,” DeSalva told reporters at the Larson Justice Center.

The crash also spawned a lawsuit filed by Vera’s family, who claim that Macias was negligent in failing to slow down, did not properly observe the coned-off zone and failed to operate his truck in accordance with the trucking industry’s safety practices.

The lawsuit, filed last April, was recently expanded to include the CHP, Caltrans, the city of Indio and Riverside County as defendants.

Today’s Top Stories Check out your First Alert Weather Forecast for the Coachella Valley

Article Topic Follows: News

Jump to comments ↓

KESQ News Team

BE PART OF THE CONVERSATION

News Channel 3 is committed to providing a forum for civil and constructive conversation.

Please keep your comments respectful and relevant. You can review our Community Guidelines by clicking here

If you would like to share a story idea, please submit it here.

Skip to content