Addiction counselor charged with murder in DUI

TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) — A substance abuse counselor was charged with murder and drunken-driving Tuesday after authorities said she struck a pedestrian and drove for more than two miles with the dying victim embedded in the windshield of her car.
Sherri Wilkins, 51, was also charged with gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated and leaving the scene of an accident, the district attorney's office said in a statement.
The victim, 31-year-old Phillip Moreno, was struck late Saturday while crossing a street. Witnesses surrounded the car about two miles later and detained Wilkins. Moreno died at a hospital.
Wilkins later told police she panicked after the accident and kept driving.
Wilkins is being held on $2.25 million bail. She was expected to be arraigned later Tuesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court in suburban Torrance.
If convicted, she could face life in prison.
Wilkins is a former addict who seemingly had turned her life around and was a respected drug and alcohol counselor, said her boss David Lisonbee.
Despite her spotty background, including a previous hit-and-run arrest, Wilkins always earned high marks with her patients and didn't show any signs of a relapse at work, said Lisonbee, CEO of Twin Tower Treatment.
Describing the new grandmother as "an incredibly sweet person," he said it wasn't unusual for drug and alcohol counselors to have addiction in their own past, as well as trouble with the law. Those circumstances help them connect with patients, he said.
"This absolutely came out of the blue. If I were to rank someone for risk of relapse, she would be pretty low on the list," he said.
Lisonbee said he didn't know what Wilkins had been addicted to.
Wilkins's previous hit-and-run arrest in Torrance came on May 30, 2010. Charges were not pursued because she had no alcohol in her system and was not found to be under the influence of other substances, according to Assistant City Attorney Patrick Sullivan.
An agreement was reached between Wilkins and owners of the other vehicles, and the hit-and-run case was dismissed, he said.
In 1994, she was convicted with a co-defendant on one count of burglary and sentenced to nine years in prison.
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AP Special Correspondent Linda Deutsch contributed to this report from Los Angeles.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press
She'll have plenty of time to counsel in prison.
I sure hope she gets life in prison.
Most, if not all, "councilers" were former drug and alcohol abusers themselves. It should be obvious that they are just as prone to addictive behavior as those they claim to be treating...what a joke. She should never be let out of prison. She chose to drink She chose to drive She chose to run from the scene with this poor man embedded in her windshield. She should never have anymore chances to make choices
She was probably a good friend of many law enforcement officers. She will serve very little to no time since she was a state worker
Lock her up!!!
or someone else dies. How in the world can you drive away with somebody IMBEDDED in the windshield of your car?
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Drug and alcohol abuse counselor,huh? What a scam, what was she counseling them to do, how not to get caught. Listen, if you're a drunk or a junkie, the only advice to be given is, if you want to clean up, then it's on you. I don't care who or what anyone is telling you, only until that drunk/junkie wants to be sober, then everything else is a waste of time. What is the recidivism rate of those who go through the "program?" From my experience, it's very high. A lot of drunks/junkies want to get loaded, they like the feeling. For them, like this woman, it's only a matter of time before they die or end up in prison.
Just wait; according to her attorney, she was just taking the victim to the hospital....