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‘I wish you were dead,’ father tells Iowa City drag racing teen who caused daughter’s death

Exactly. No reason to ruin the kid's future, but 6 months to a year in prison seems more than reasonable.
He killed someone. The victim has no future, and her family's future has been ruined.

Sorry, but I have less empathy than you.
 
A heartbroken Waterloo father on Monday chastised and cursed an 18-year-old Iowa City man who, along with another teen, caused a fatal crash that killed his 22-year-old daughter on May 27, 2023.



Matt Russell, father of Jennifer Russell, chastised Elijah Seals, during Seals’ sentencing, for leaving the crash scene and never showing any remorse for drag racing that night with Kesean Ford, who also is charged. Seals and Ford crashed into Jennifer’s vehicle, which was stopped at the intersection of S. Seventh Avenue and E. Court Street.


“We have suffered so much pain and sorrow,” Matt Russell said. “We lost a big part of our life. I hate you and wish you were dead. She was the best daughter. Rot in hell.”




Tyler Russell, Jennifer’s brother, in his victim impact statement, accused Seals of taking a “coward’s way out” for not admitting guilt, instead taking an Alford plea. The death of his sister has shattered his and his families’ future. It turned their “world upside down.”


The brother said he hoped the “agony” Seals caused will “haunt you for the rest of your life. Hope the memory of her haunts you every day.”


“She was here and then she was gone on that horrific night,” said Kelly Russell, Jennifer’s mother, while tearing up throughout her statement.


Kelly was on the phone with Jennifer, who was using a Bluetooth device to talk on her way home from work that night. She had just started as a manager at Jethro’s BBQ in Coralville. Kelly Russell said she didn’t know what happened to her daughter. She heard noises in the background and a man yelling. She thought her daughter was being abducted.


She and her husband were panicked. They jumped in the car and started tracking their daughter’s phone and driving to Iowa City. Then, her husband got a call from the hospital saying Jennifer had been in a crash and she didn’t survive.


“I think about that cruel and unbelievable moment she was at that intersection,” Kelly Russell said. “What were you thinking? Did you see her car? And you walked away without injury. So unfair.”


They had to wait 18 months and “this wasn’t the justice we were seeking. This wasn’t an accident. Never an accident. It was violent, senseless, horrific crash.”


Many family members and friends filled one half the courtroom on Monday. Seals’ family and friends also attended the sentencing.


In September, Seals made an Alford plea to one count of homicide by vehicle-reckless driving, a felony, which carries a 10-year prison term. An Alford plea is when a defendant maintains innocence but admits the prosecution has enough evidence to convict.


Seals originally was charged with involuntary manslaughter and two other charges of homicide by vehicle-drag racing and homicide by vehicle-excessive speed by going 25 mph over the limit. Those charges were dismissed at sentencing.


Seals declined to make a statement during sentencing.






Sixth Judicial District Judge David Cox didn’t sentence Seals to prison because of a plea agreement, which suspended the 10 years and gave him three years of probation.


The plea agreement was based on Seals being 17 years old at the time of the offense and his lack of criminal history.


The judge also ordered Seals to pay $150,000 in restitution to the heirs or estate of Jennifer Russell.


Cox said Seals will be jointly or severally responsible with Kesean Ford, if Ford is convicted. Ford’s trial is set for Feb. 11.


Seals also will have his driver’s license revoked for a length of time determined by the Iowa Department of Transportation, Cox said.


Cox warned Seals to follow the terms of the probation because if he doesn’t, the prosecution can ask to revoke it and Seals could be sentenced to the 10 years if he has violations during those three years.


The judge said there is nothing the court or Seals can do to change what happened to Jennifer Russell but Seals can “fix” himself.


After sentencing, Matt and Kelly Russell, told The Gazette they were upset about the Alford plea. They didn’t know about it until they walked into court for the plea hearing. They also were frustrated with the written plea because it didn’t use their daughter’s name — only her initials — in the place where he had to sign and admit his guilt.


“He was drag racing and you don’t admit your role in this,” Kelly Russell said. “And that (Alford plea) is nonsense. I’m so angry.”


She also hoped Seals would stand up Monday and say he was sorry, but he didn’t.


Matt Russell said they want to pursue legislation to change this charge and make it a higher penalty for causing someone’s death. He knows the prosecutors gave the most severe penalty and the prosecutors are “begging” for someone to change it, he said.


“This is not right,” Matt Russell said. “How does someone die and nothing happens. We don’t feel like (law enforcement) was thorough enough from the start.”


“We’re just broken … destroyed. She was a neat person. She was good.”


Seals was driving more than twice the 25 mph speed limit​


According to a criminal complaint, Ford was driving a 2008 Saturn VUE and speeding on E. Court Street at 10:45 p.m. that night He was driving next to a white 2012 GMC Acadia being driven by Seals, who also was speeding.


The VUE crashed into a gray 2017 Chevrolet Malibu, driven by Russell, at the intersection of E. Court Street and S. Seventh Avenue. The Malibu was pushed into the Acadia, and Russell’s car was pushed into a utility pole. Russell was killed in the crash.


Both teens were driving more than 25 mph over the speed limit — which is 25 mph — and both failed to stop at a stop sign, resulting in the crash, the complaint stated.


Russell’s parents last year filed a wrongful-death lawsuit, which was dismissed without prejudice in February by a judge because of a technicality. The petition was served to Seals, a minor at the time, and not his parent or guardian, which the law requires.


Because the lawsuit was dismissed without prejudice, the Russells could refile it, but nothing has been filed yet.

Although these things sometimes understandably take time, I do hope the father finds his way to forgiveness. It's really the only thing that ever really allows you to move forward in life.

Can't believe the suspended sentence.
 
As an attorney, here's a fun top tip. Want to kill a human and serve little to no time? Get in your car hoss and do the deed.
 
Although these things sometimes understandably take time, I do hope the father finds his way to forgiveness. It's really the only thing that ever really allows you to move forward in life.

Can't believe the suspended sentence.
He will move forward once he does what needs to be done.....everyone involved in this injustice, must learn from what they've done.........
 
Except he isn't even going to prison which is mind boggling.

I've come to the conclusion that our country just doesn't take vehicular crimes seriously despite the fact that car accidents are the leading cause of accidental death.

People have taken their sports cars, gone 180+ mph down a highway and the max sentence was like 30 days.

DUI it's sort of a similar thing.
Correct. If you want to murder somebody run over them with a car. You’re probably fine.
 
I once got a year of probation with 90 days suspended for head butting a guy in a fight in college. It is judges like this guy that got the GOP the sweep. Theyre everywhere. We went from clubbing everyone with the arm of the law to dishing out wrist slaps for criminally negligent homicides.

Google the judge and who appointed him, please.
 
It happened in MN too. Where some want to raise the minor age to 21 or 25, at least the older sister shown in the video thumbnail was sentenced to 15 years, albeit, her punishment should be death.

Unbelievable.

This b!tch Camille is drag racing her brother and going over twice the speed limit causing the brother's car to slam into another car killing both occupants, a young couple. Her brother sustains minor injuries and his passenger, another sister, has more serious injuries. But in her uber-victim mentality, Camille screams toward the actual victims' car "That WHITE bitch better be dead ... if they're not I'm gonna stomp their head ... "

When told she was going to be arrested for drag racing and that a witness saw them "squealing out" from the intersection Camille states they are lying "and probably are WHITE ... "

While this Camille did get 10 years her brother got a mere slap on the wrists as a minor (17 yrs and 10 months old) like in the OP.

Like the guilty party in the OP, never did they nor their family express remorse. In fact, one family member speaking to another family member in the presence of the male victim's mother said, referring to the mother, "She's NOTHING."

Umm ... I dunno. I guess when people are slinging "Whiteness" around like it's a disease these vile attitudes are not all that unexpected. Three young people dead would seem tragic enough without the ugliness of this racial animus heaped on top. Very, very sad.
 
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Jointly and severally would have to be civil. But I find it hard to believe that a civil case would be advanced this far along already.

This kid needs to feel the inside of the walls of prison. I don't want yet another life wasted. But nobody is doing him any favors with a probation slap on the wrist
 
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Iowa court system offered zero justice to the family of the deceased. This is how vigilante "justice" becomes a thing.
 
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