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Son who left 77-year-old mother to die alone after crashing car in ditch and running to his home's crawl space learns his fate

 
Casey Yiannackopoulos

Left: Police in Muskego, Wis., investigate a car crash that left a 77-year-old woman dead. Right: Casey Yiannackopoulos (Muskego Police Department).

A Wisconsin man who was out drinking with his mother when he crashed his car into a ditch and ran away from the scene, leaving her to die alone in the passenger seat, is headed to prison.

Casey Yiannackopoulos, 48, pleaded guilty to homicide by intoxicated use of a vehicle and was sentenced to 18 years in prison followed by eight years of probation. He was originally facing charges of first-degree reckless homicide, hit-and-run involving death and two counts of resisting or obstructing an officer.

During the sentencing, Yiannackopoulos turned to his family and said he was sorry.

"The closest thing to God you will feel is the love of your mother," he told the judge, according to a courtroom report from local NBC affiliate WTMJ.

But Judge Ralph Ramirez said an apology will not suffice.

"I know that Mr. Yiannackopoulos keenly feels the loss of his mother but I refuse to feel sorry for the man who caused the death of his own mother," Ramirez said.

As Law&Crime previously reported, cops responded around 7:15 p.m. Nov. 2 to the S7100 block of Hillendale Drive to a single-vehicle crash in Muskego, a Milwaukee suburb.

When they arrived, they found a 77-year-old woman in the front passenger seat. She was the only person in the car. The driver, later identified as Yiannackopoulos, was nowhere to be found. First responders had to break through the front and rear passenger windows so they could extricate her from the car. The woman was unconscious but breathing. She was rushed to the hospital, where doctors pronounced her dead about an hour later. Her name has not been publicly released.

A probable cause arrest affidavit obtained by Law&Crime said several witnesses saw Yiannackopoulos run away. They said he appeared to be intoxicated as he was unsteady on his feet and reeked of booze. Yiannackopoulos told the witnesses that he was going to get help but he never did, cops say.

Home surveillance video captured the crash. It allegedly showed Yiannackopoulos driving at least 50 mph in a 30 mph zone before he left the road and crashed.

More from Law&Crime: Mom on drive with her 3 children dies with all of them after Ford F-150 driver blows through red light and slams into their SUV: Police

Cops learned that Yiannackopoulos' mother lived down the street from where the crash occurred. When they went inside, they saw a ladder leading to a crawl space with the plywood door slightly ajar. Yiannackopoulos refused to come down and yelled and cursed at the officers. Around 10:45 p.m. cops sent a drone up to the crawl space. They saw Yiannackopoulos hiding under some blankets and a plastic bin cover.

He eventually had to be physically removed and taken into custody, the affidavit said. Cops said he had bloodshot and glassy eyes. Yiannackopoulos said "it was an accident" and he would have been "way more cooperative" if he knew at the scene that his mother was dead, according to the complaint.

Court Commissioner Daniel Rieck seemed flabbergasted at Yiannackopoulos' alleged actions.

"As I read through your criminal complaint, sir, quite frankly, the word that came to mind over and over was depraved," Rieck said, according to a courtroom report from local ABC affiliate WISN. "This went from driving while drunk, having what one would presume is a very unfortunate, traumatic accident, losing your mother, but then quite literally leaving her to die. Why? Because you didn't want to get in trouble."

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