Driver charged with DWI, vehicular homicide after crash that left woman dead in parking lot
Updated Jan 22, 2021;
A driver whose pickup truck jumped a curb earlier this month and fatally struck a 61-year-old woman was driving while under the influence at the time, authorities announced Friday night.
Andrew Hallock, 75, of the Fords section of Woodbridge, was charged with second-degree vehicular homicide and driving while intoxicated, according to a joint statement from the Woodbridge Police and the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office.
An investigation revealed that Hallock was driving a Toyota Tundra south on Hoy Avenue on Jan. 4 at 1:36 p.m. when he crossed over the curb at the road’s intersection with New Brunswick Avenue, passed into a nearby parking lot and struck Mary Ann Logozio, 61, of Fords, the office said.
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WOODBRIDGE – A Woodbridge man has been charged for his involvement in the death of a pedestrian who he struck with his vehicle.
Andrew Hallock, 75, of the Fords section of Woodbridge was charged Friday night with second-degree vehicular homicide and driving while intoxicated, according to the Middlesex County Prosecutor s Office.
The incident happened on Jan. 4th at approximately 1:36 p.m. when a Toyota Tundra traveling southbound on Hoy Avenue crossed over the curb at the intersection of New Brunswick Avenue and Hoy Avenue, prosecutors said.
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The Tundra then passed into an adjacent parking lot where it struck Mary Ann Logozio, 61, of Fords. Logozio was pronounced dead at the scene.
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EDISON – Up until recently it was not clear if the New Jersey Attorney General’s office was investigating the racist flier that was distributed by mail during the 2017 Edison Township Public Schools Board of Education election.
Early on in the investigation, Edison Police Chief Thomas Bryan had said the investigation was in the hands of the Attorney General’s (AG) office and a public information officer for the AG had said the office’s policy “is that we neither confirm nor deny investigations.”
During a Committee of the Whole meeting on Jan. 20, Council President Robert Diehl said Mayor Thomas Lankey received a letter from the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office informing the township the state AG’s Office has picked up the case and has assigned a detective to the case.