Connect with us

Crime

Taunton man pleads guilty, sentenced to prison, for crash that killed Fall River’s Peggy McGowan

Published

on

A 30-year-old Taunton man pled guilty Wednesday in Fall River Superior Court in relation to a fatal crash, which occurred on March 10, 2024, on Route 44 in Taunton.

Ricky Jorge Ponte pled guilty to Manslaughter while Operating Under the Influence, Leaving the Scene of a Crash-Death Resulting, Operating Under the Influence-Resulting in Serious Injury and Leaving the Scene of a Crash with Personal Injury.

Ponte was sentenced to not less than 6 years to not more than 7 years in prison.

The charges stemmed from a crash in the area of 380 Winthrop Street (Route 44).  At approximately 9:15 p.m., Taunton Police were called to the scene of a two-car crash. Vehicle one was identified as a black Mercedes and vehicle two was identified as a Honda CRV.  The Mercedes was found to be unoccupied, but a 46-year-old passenger in the Mercedes was located nearby.  The passenger advised officers that Ponte had been driving the Mercedes, but he had left the area after the crash.

A short time later, Taunton Police received a call from an employee at the Irving Gas Station on Route 44 in Taunton.  The employee told police that a man has just entered the gas station bleeding.  The man was later identified as the defendant.

When first responders approached the Honda CRV, they found the driver, 67-year-old Margaret (Peggy) McGowan of Fall River, trapped inside the car.  Her passenger, a 16-year-old female relative, was sitting outside the car in a state of shock. McGowan was eventually extricated from the vehicle, at which time she and the 16-year-old were transported to area hospitals.  On March 28, McGowan succumbed to injuries sustained in the crash and died at the hospital.  The 16-year-old was seriously injured, but her injuries were not life-threatening.

Ponte could be seen on video exiting his vehicle and walking away from the screaming victim after the crash. 

Data retrieved from his vehicle showed Ponte was driving 71 MPH in a 40 MPH mixed residential and commercial zone and did not brake before the head on collision. 

When Ponte left the scene, a worker at the store noticed he had blood on his face. Ponte was stumbling and asked for the bathroom and had to be directed to the bathroom. Instead of calling 911, phone data shows Ponte instead called his mother, who eventually showed up at the scene. 

When officers found Ponte, he was on the floor of the bathroom, and they determined that he had glassy eyes and was combative. Ponte himself was transported to the hospital for his own injuries. Once there, Ponte said he had no memory of the crash. 

While McGowan obtained a master’s degree and went on to be a Case Manager for the Department of Developmental Disabilities in Plymouth, Fall River residents remember Peggy most as a crossing guard in her post-retirement life where she was beloved by every person she came across which resulted in a community service award in 2022.

Advertisement

Copyright © 2017 Fall River Reporter

Translate »