ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: TUESDAY, May 15, 1990                   TAG: 9005150630
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B-1   EDITION: EVENING 
SOURCE: VICTORIA RATCLIFF STAFF WRITER
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Medium


ILLEGAL DRIVER IS CONVICTED

Six years ago, Nathan Max Erickson was sentenced to 20 years in prison for killing a Moneta couple and their unborn child in a head-on collision while driving drunk in Bedford County.

The accident prompted Community Hospital's infant car-seat loan program because Daniel Patrick Skaggs, the 14-month-old son of Dennis and Linda Lou Skaggs, was sitting in a child restraint seat and survived the crash with only hairline fractures in both legs. Linda Lou Skaggs was a nurse at the hospital.

Erickson, who has been convicted of 11 other traffic violations, including drunken driving, also was sentenced to a year in prison for possession of methamphetamine during the accident that killed the Skaggses.

He spent just over four years in prison, and was paroled in July 1988.

Today, Erickson, 29, pleaded no contest in Roanoke County Circuit Court to driving last fall after having been adjudicated an habitual offender.

In April 1986, while Erickson was in prison, a Botetourt County judge took his driver's license for 10 years after determining that Erickson's driving record was bad enough to declare him an habitual offender.

Roanoke County Circuit Court Judge Kenneth Trabue convicted Erickson today and ordered that a background report be prepared prior to sentencing on July 10. Erickson faces up to five years in prison and a mandatory sentence of one year.

Erickson also faces about 15 years of his 20-year sentence for involuntary manslaughter in the Skaggs' deaths if the Virginia Parole Board chooses to revoke that time, according to parole officials in Roanoke.

Roanoke County Chief Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Randy Leach summarized the evidence against Erickson today.

Roanoke County Deputy T.D. Valentine stopped Erickson in a 1977 pickup truck on the Blue Ridge Parkway about 12:30 a.m. on Sept. 6, 1989, Leach said.

Valentine stopped Erickson for driving erratically, Leach said. Erickson had crossed the center line four times in an eighth of a mile, he said.

When Valentine asked to see Erickson's driver's license, Erickson told him it was suspended, Leach said. Erickson also told the officer he was driving erratically because he was sick, he said.

Valentine charged Erickson with the misdemeanor of driving on a suspended driver's license. But a further check of driving records showed that he had been adjudicated an habitual offender, Leach said.

Prosecutors dropped the misdemeanor charge against Erickson, and he was indicted for the felony.

Leach said there was no indication that Erickson had been using alcohol the night Valentine stopped him.

When Erickson pleaded guilty to possession of amphetamines after the accident that killed the Skaggses, he told Bedford County Circuit Court Judge William Sweeney that he had resolved "to stay away from alcohol. It has caused me nothing but trouble. I'm sorry . . . But there's no way I can bring Mr. and Mrs. Skaggs back by saying I'm sorry."

Erickson did not speak in court today other than to answer questions from the judge about whether he had freely decided to plead no contest.

Bob Rider, Erickson's attorney, said today that he had been unable to find a witness who would have testified as to why his client was driving last September. He asked Trabue if the witness could testify at the July sentencing hearing if he could be located. Trabue granted the request.

Leach said after the trial that he understood the witness would testify that he had been ill and that Erickson was coming to pick him up.

Dennis Skaggs, 28, and his wife, Linda Lou, 33, were killed July 3, 1983, when a station wagon driven by Erickson crashed into their Volkswagen van on Virginia 24 east of Stewartsville. Linda Lou Skaggs was nine months pregnant.

Erickson's blood-alcohol content, taken about an hour after the crash, was 0.0988 percent - lower than the 0.10 level at which a driver is presumed legally drunk in Virginia.

Erickson had completed a Virginia Alcohol Safety Action Program class shortly before the crash. He had a string of other traffic violations.

The first occurred in 1977, the year after Erickson received his driver's license.

A Roanoke Circuit Court judge upheld three other driving convictions against Erickson several months after he was convicted in the Skaggses' deaths. Those included leaving the scene of an accident, drunken driving and driving with a suspended license. B2 B1 DRIVER Driver



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