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John Garrison Charged With Vehicular Homicide, Faces Minimum of 9 Years in Prison in Death of Debra Ashrafi on SR11 | FlaglerLive

flaglerlive.com 12-12-2023 07:53 6 Minutes reading
John Frederick Garrison, a 49-year-old resident of Deltona, was arrested Monday on charges of vehicular homicide and reckless driving causing serious injuries as a result of the head-on crash last year on State Road 11 south of Bunnell that devastated three generations of a single family. The crash took the life of Debra Ashrafi, 59, and critically injured her 41-year-old daughter Shana Sciortino, who was at the wheel of the vehicle, and her 79-year-old mother Shirley Burkett. Sciortino, Burkett, and Ashrafi's husband Dariush all have filed civil suits against Garrison. His car insurer at the time has filed suit to defend against any claims, arguing that Garrison was on a work trip at the time and so was not covered by the policy. Garrison, an electrician and electronics installer, faces a minimum mandatory nine years in prison if convicted on the vehicular homicide charge, which is applied when a person is killed as a result of reckless driving. The Florida Highway Patrol determined Garrison had been driving recklessly. His combined charges add up to a potential maximum of 25 years in prison if he is convicted. Garrison is being held at the Volusia Branch Jail, pending extradition to Flagler County. He's being held on $30,000 bond. The crash took place on April 24, 2022, at 10:50 a.m. just south of Bunnell. (See: "59-Year-Old Woman Killed, Two Critical in Head-On Crash on SR 11 Just Past Center of Bunnell.") Depositions, statements and affidavits in the several civil cases provide an unusually detailed breakdown of what led to the crash, and to a misjudgment that ended a life and permanently changed the trajectory of four others. That morning, Garrison and his son, now 22, had set off from Eustis with Eric Vonhold, in two cars, on their way to a pair of jobs for the same company Apogee Integrations-the Garrisons in Connecticut, Vonhold in New Jersey. The Garrisons installed electronic equipment in highway patrol vehicles. They would travel together for much of the way, the Garrisons in their 2008 Dodge Avenger, Vonhold in his Mazda. Their GPS had them take SR11, on their way to I-95. Garrison had never been on 11 before. Garrison and Vonhold were on the phone. Garrison's phone was in a cup holder. Vonhold as lead driver would give directions, "he would basically like reiterate and tell us, you know, change lanes, go to the left for passing or there's an off ramp coming up that we need, that kind of stuff. So we just followed him along," Garrison said. Apparently unbeknownst to Vonhold, Garrison-a friend of more than 20 years' date-relied on him for directions. "We swapped position while driving the trip. There's no lead or subordinate or anything of that nature," Vonhold recalled. "If he was relying on me, he didn't tell me that he had-that he needed to follow me." It was the first time they'd gone on a trip together, in separate cars. "It's not like it would be the end of the world if we got separated. We both have the same locations, same apps, the same directions." They'd been following a semi truck that was going 8 to 10 miles per hour under the speed limit, for some 10 miles. "I finally found a long patch that was completely clear, and so I took the chance to go ahead and pass," Vonhold said. "And it weas clear. I was able to pass them." He doesn't remember whether Garrison was behind him during the passing maneuver, only that the truck started accelerating once he tried to pass. He got past him without a problem. He also saw another vehicle approaching in the other direction. That was Ashrafi's vehicle. Vonhold said he would not have started passing had he seen the car first. He heard Garrison say he was going to pass, too. "Now I remember that. He said I'm gonna pass, and I think at that time that's when I said that was too close," Vonhold said, "and I was hoping maybe he wouldn't try to pass." Garrison did. He remembers the sequence. "We were passing traffic and there was a semi on the right," Garrison said. Garrison said he didn't know what the hurry was. "Not like we had to get anywhere. We were going to frigging Virginia and staying a night at a hotel, so whenever we got there we got there." But he decided to pass all the same. As they were passing the cars, he said his eyes were trained on Vonhold's taillights. "I felt more like a passenger than being situationally aware of what I was doing," he said. "It was a two-lane road. There was a deep valleyed ditch on the left. He [Vonhold] sped up to the right even more and got in front of a semi and when he did I noticed the traffic that I could see over the roof of his car was much closer than what looked like the semi that was further back. I remember standing on the brakes, the car almost not quite fishtailing and trying to recorrect for that." It was a catastrophic misjudgment. Garrison hadn't been drinking. He hadn't been smoking pot. He wasn't on prescription drugs. He'd made a decision to pass, and it was the wrong decision. "I remember the airbags, that white thing coming at my face at some point," he said. "I remember saying something to [my son] like, gosh, that was close, or God saved us, that was close. And then I remember an impact, and then that's about the last thing that I remember. I was out for a little bit." Vonhold didn't see, but he heard, the impact, describing it "like a thunderous bump." The phone line was still open. He doesn't remember saying anything on the phone. He turned around, parked, went into what was a "hectic" scene, and went over to Garrison's son, but not to John Garrison. He did not check on any of the victims in either cars involved in the crash. He said he was in shock. "I didn't go inspecting vehicles or climbing into vehicles or doing anything like that there because I didn't want to get into anything and be in the way," he said. He walked by Garrison's vehicle but didn't get close. "I think I overheard somebody talking about how it looks like someone may not have made it," Vonhold said. Garrison was knocked out and remembers only vaguely, in glimpses, how someone knocked on his car door, how he seemed to have been transported, how he was in an X-Ray room. His right foot, left shoulder, his right wrist and three ribs were broken. His son fared much better, though he refuses to have any conversations about the crash. The family in the other car fared far worse. Garrison in depositions or statements has taken responsibility, refusing to blame either Vonhold or the trucker, let alone anyone in the other car, since the other car had the right of way, he said. "I was the one driving. I just trusted someone else's opinion of what we were doing and went along with it," Garrison said. He'd committed. Then "There was nowhere to go." At the end of one of his interviews with an attorney representing Debra Ashrafi's estate, the attorney asked him: "Is there anything else you'd like to add, Mr. Garrison?" Ashrafi had been a business owner in New Jersey. "That I am so incredibly sorry for all of this-my heart breaks-literally I'm dying inside," Garrison replied. "I'm so sorry." He then sobbed uncontrollably. "I know you are, and I appreciate your saying that," the attorney said. "It's a horrible thing, but you know accidents do happen and it's unfortunate-I think you know in time everything will be okay, hopefully." The criminal and civil cases stacked up against Garrison tell a different story.

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The picture above was taken January 1, 1975. I know this because my father, a photographer, was in the habit of stamping the date on the back of his hard copies, signing his name and including a cataloguing reference I never understood. You can barely see the elaborate crèche he built behind the kids' table. I am sitting to the right of my cousin Danielle, to the left of my older brother Gabriel, with a white paper sheet with the word "PRESS" on my vest: even then, whoring for the profession (another picture shows me taking pictures and my cousin Philippe recording an interview of the guests). To the very left is Selma, our maid at the time, from Syria, a sweet creature vaguely suspect my parents abused and paid dirt wages, as Lebanese bourgeois families tended to do with "the help," though my parents forbade us children from ever being served by the help. We had to be our own help, and if we ever spoke the wrong way to her the wrath of dad would be upon us, so maybe they weren't so abusive of her after all. In the distance are my aunt and uncle, Renee and Andre, who are still alive and living in Paris, like Jacques Brel, bless their hearts, as are their daughters, Michelle and Nicole, who in the picture are sitting at the children's table with me but in life have been ensconced in the Emirates, living that good life, for many years, last I knew. We have not stayed in touch as cousins should. As for Selma, who was barely older than me at the time-for all their Sunday Christianity and supposed liberalism, the Lebanese seemed to have no qualms about child labor-I can only hope she has survived the years of devastation in her own country, assuming she made it back. My father never appears in this set of pictures: he was clicking away behind the camera. Three month and 13 days after that picture was taken-after that wonderful New Year's feast when we thought the wonders could never cease-April 13, 1975 happened, and our sumptuous self-indulgence, our nation, our lives broke. The country went to war and didn't stop for the next 15 years, and even then, I'm not sure it has. I eventually escaped, though the more I age, the less those buffers I created with a past too wonderful to bear, because it is irrecoverable, and too crushing to remember, because the distance is so imaginary, seem to be effective anymore. It is in the ordinary of a Palm Coast evening, of a string of Christmas lights or a friend's picture of a manger, that the illusion of that insulating membrane gives way. I imagine I'm like anyone else: I don't like taking down Christmas lights, which I have timed to go off at night but come back on before dawn, so I can see them when I get up for a little quiet meditation between hard covers and before the workday begins, and so they can be on when Cheryl leaves for work. Nor do I like taking down the Christmas tree, tiny though it's become over the years: Christmas trees diminish in size and garlands in proportion to our years. Real trees accumulate rings. Fake Christmas trees she...

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