Homicide Charge for Man With 7 Prior DUIs

A man already accused in more than a half dozen instances of driving under the influence now faces a homicide by vehicle charge after allegedly drunkenly crashing his pickup truck into a 24-year-old man's motorcycle.

"Liam Crowley would be alive today if Robert Landis had not blatantly disobeyed our laws," said Westtown-East Goshen Regional Police Department Chief Brenda Bernot. "But Landis has demonstrated that he does not care about others and his incredibly selfish acts on April 26 took the life of a young man with so much potential."

Chester County District Attorney Thomas Hogan says that an investigation showed that Landis was driving with a blood alcohol level of 0.28 -- three times the legal limit -- on April 26 when he turned his 2004 Dodge Ram into oncoming traffic at Wilmington Pike (State Route 202) and Stanton Avenue in Westtown Township. Authorities say Landis was trying to turn onto Stanton.

Crowley's motorcycle, which was going straight, was struck by Landis' pickup at the intersection.

Landis told police the motorcycle "came out of nowhere," according to an affidavit obtained by NBC10.

"Getting behind the wheel of a pickup truck at night on the highway with this much alcohol in your system is like firing a 5,000 pound bullet into a crowd of people," Hogan said.

Police say Landis, 49, had bloodshot eyes and smelled of alcohol as he slurred his speech following the crash, according to Hogan.

Landis told police he only had "a couple of beers," Hogan said.  Investigators say they found numerous empty and full beer cans in his pickup.

An investigation showed the Landis -- who was living with his mother -- was driving on a suspended license.

According to court records and the Chester County D.A., Landis pleaded guilty to five previous DUIs and was entered into an alcohol treatment program two other times -- dating all the way back to a 1981 arrest -- before this deadly crash. The District Attorney says Landis would have been eligible to drive as of 2012 if he had filled out proper paperwork.

The question remains why Landis was able to get behind the wheel.

Liam Crowley's father choked back tears while discussing the loss of his son.

"It's too much to overcome," he said following the wreck.

Crowley's father, who didn't want to be identified, isn't ready to forgive.

"As far as I'm concerned he has no soul," he said. "I have no mercy for him whatsoever."
 

Landis was arraigned Tuesday morning and sent to county jail in lieu of $1 million bail.

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