Volunteers sought for driver reviver

Volunteers sought for driver reviver

Volunteers sought for driver reviver

By BILL REITWEISER

The New York Times

Sunday, June 12, 1997

The man accused of killing his wife and a 2-year-old twin had been looking for someone to drive his car during a five-hour drive through the eastern New York area on Tuesday morning.

Trevor H. Miller, 26, was traveling from the state's Fairhaven neighborhood on Interstate 81 near his home, about 60 miles north of New York City, wnatyasastra.comhen he drove into a parking spot at the exit for Interstate 93 at Interstate 5E in Fairhaven about 3:50 a.m., the authorities said.

At the nearby entrance to the Interstate Route 5E in Rensselaer, he asked a man he had just met to drive a 2005 Silverado pickup truck to the parking lot and pick him up about an hour later, prosecutors said. The driver did, authorities s바카라사이트aid.

Advertisement Continue reading the main story

But afterward, Mr. Miller returned to his car, drove around the site of the accident and then stopped at the exit, where the man waited outside about 30 minutes, investigators said.

The man, who has not been identified, said he had been drinking and had been in the bar when he left for the bathroom, Mr. Miller told the authorities, according to the authorities and interviews with people who saw him and his father on Tuesday.

Th바카라e man did not recognize either the Silverado that Mr. Miller had rented or the one that Mr. Miller said he had used to drive him to his home in the Fairhaven area. He also had not seen his vehicle in several days.

The man was taken into custody after he was found near the site of the accident, about 11 p.m.

The father, who declined to be identified, told the authorities that he had stopped the truck in the parking lot of a gas station about a mile south of Mr. Miller's home because the driver had refused to pay for a new tire.

After Mr. Miller arrived and spoke with the man in the truck, Mr. Miller drove the truck home on Interstate 95 toward the state's Fairhaven community, which includes the Fairhaven airport, police said.

His pickup truck is registered to J. Richard Durbin, 30, of Westchester County. He is a resident of Westchester County and has lived in the area for the last 15 years, police said. Mr. Durbi

Les commentaires sont fermés.