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The nurse facing murder charges for the fiery Los Angeles crash that killed five was going 130 mph – it was revealed on Sunday – 40 miles faster than previously thought.
Nicole Linton, 37, was initially thought to be driving her Mercedes at 90 mph, but court papers obtained by the Los Angles Times on Sunday said she floored the pedal for at least five seconds before deliberately speeding into La Brea and Slauson avenues on Aug. 4.
“Further analysis reveals that her speed at impact was in fact 130 mph and that she floored the gas pedal for at least the 5 seconds leading into the crash, going from 122 mph to 130 mph,” said the filing, which was released on Friday.
Prosecutors laid waste to the claims that she lost consciousness by citing surveillance video and data from her Mercedes. The documents said Linton had “complete control over steering, maintaining the tilt of the steering wheel to keep her car traveling directly toward the crowded intersection.”Linton faces six counts of murder and five counts of vehicular manslaughter. Jason Armond /Los Angeles Times via Getty Imag
Nicole Linton was traveling 130 mph when she collided with other vehicles.
“This NASCAR-worthy performance flies in the face of the notion that she was unconscious or incapacitated,” the filing said.
Linton was hit with six counts of murder and faces five counts of vehicular manslaughter.
Ashley Ryan, who was pregnant, died in the crash, as did her 11-month-old son Allonzo, and her boyfriend Reynold Lester. The family was reportedly heading to a prenatal checkup at the time of the collision.
Linton’s attorneys last month filed medical forms that detailed her struggle with bipolar disorder and included a determination by doctors that the nurse had an “apparent lapse of consciousness” at the time of the crash.