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Editorial
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Title: Grief Stricken Father Sentenced to Six Years in Prison (My Title)
Source: Toledo Blade
URL Source: http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dl ... 80301/NEWS02/803010412/-1/NEWS
Published: Mar 1, 2008
Author: BLADE STAFF WRITER
Post Date: 2008-03-01 09:07:05 by iconoclast
Keywords: None
Views: 1375
Comments: 139

Article published Saturday, March 1, 2008

Fackelman given nearly 6 years in home invasion

Sentence includes ban from Bedford Twp.

By MARK REITER BLADE STAFF WRITER

MONROE - A Toledo man who claimed he couldn't recall pulling a loaded handgun on the man he held responsible for causing the road-rage death of his teenage son will serve at least 5 3/4 years in prison.

At the sentencing for Charles Fackelman in Monroe County Circuit Court, Judge Joseph Costello, Jr., said the defendant's actions in the March 24 gun toting attack on Randy Krell and his neighbor were methodical and controlled.

"Everything you did that day demonstrates to me that you knew what you were doing," the judge said.

Fackelman, 47, was convicted after a jury trial in January on two counts of felonious assault, home invasion, and gun possession. He will receive credit for the 31 days he has served in the county jail.

At his trial, Fackelman took the stand and claimed he didn't remember driving to the Lambertville home of Mr. Krell, pulling a loaded gun, pursuing him to the home of the neighbor, Thomas Williams, and kicking down the steel door of Mr. Williams' house in an attempt to get to Mr. Krell.

Not guilty by reason of insanity was among the verdicts that the jury could have reached. Instead, the panel found Fackelman guilty but mentally ill.

Judge Costello imposed a two-year mandatory sentence for the gun possession conviction and added 3 3/4 years to 20 years to the punishment for the other offenses. Fackelman also was ordered to never enter Bedford Township upon his release from prison without the court's permission.

Mr. Krell, 52, was released from the county jail Feb. 20 for the sentence he received for chasing after a carload of teenagers in June, 2006, after one of them tossed a water bottle at his car.

The car, driven by Austin Oberle, went out of control at a Whiteford Township intersection and crashed into a tree, killing Charlie Fackelman, the defendant's 17-year-old son, and seriously injuring a teenage girl.

Mr. Krell, a former Bedford Public Schools board member, was convicted in a jury trial in August of negligent homicide. He served about five months of a nine-month jail sentence.

Mr. Williams, who is an assistant principal at Dundee High School, and Mr. Krell were in the courtroom for the sentencing yesterday, but neither victim wanted to make a statement to the court. They left the packed courtroom immediately.

Fackelman, who was dismissed from his job with the U.S. Postal Service, didn't make a statement at his sentencing.

A day before the confrontation at Mr. Krell's home - and 32 days after the crash that killed his son - Fackelman attended the Whitmer High School baseball team's first home game of the season. His son would have been a senior and the team's starting shortstop.

According to testimony, the defendant acted strangely and stood alone at the game. Witnesses said he stared into the infield at the position that Charlie would have played. His wife, Janet, testified that her husband came home from the game, went to his bedroom, and cried himself to sleep.

Kenneth Simon, a Wayne County, Michigan, assistant prosecutor who handled the case, argued to Judge Costello that a message needed to be sent to discourage others from taking the law into their own hands.

"What would have happened in this case if Randy Krell had not gone to Mr. Williams' house? I think at the very least that Mr. Fackelman's intent was more than pointing a gun at Mr. Krell," Mr. Simon said.

Defense attorney Asad Farah argued for leniency and asked the judge to depart from state sentencing guidelines.

Mr. Farah said the tragic death of his son threw Fackelman into mental illness and he couldn't deal with the loss, causing unusual mitigating factors in the case.

"He needs help. He needs to continue on with his medication. He needs to continue on with his therapy," Mr. Farah said. "There is no dispute that he has a mental illness. The question is whether he will receive help under a prison sanction."

Judge Costello said that Fackelman put the victims and their families as well as their neighborhood in a state of fear, to the point that Mr. Williams became suspicious when a strange vehicle drove past.

"No one should have to live like that," the judge said.

Under state law, Fackelman will not be eligible to appear before the parole board until he serves the minimum punishment of 69 months.

Fackelman also was ordered by Judge Costello to pay restitution of $1,564 to Mr. Williams and his insurance carrier for the damage that he did to the home.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 15.

#1. To: All (#0)

American Justice, circa 2008?

The hot-headed adult idiot got nine months, served five!

iconoclast  posted on  2008-03-01   9:09:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: All (#1)

Epilogue.

Article ID: MERLIN_4539418 Published on July 5, 2007 Blade, The (Toledo, OH)

Justice is not enough to fill families' void

The car crash itself occurred in a split second. Stevie Beale, 18, can't even remember the exact moment of impact or the sounds of sliding wheels that preceded it.

But like the old story of a pebble dropped into a stream, the ripples of the June, 2006, accident have carried far beyond its initial impact.

A paralyzed girl, a dead boy, two now-convicted felons, lost jobs, torn families, accumulated bills, and a laundry list of emotional burdens have followed.

Through tragedy, the Beale and Fackelman families have become close, helping to guide each other through the aftermath. They now are attempting to steady themselves for recovery.

"I just have to let it go," said Charles V. Fackelman, the father of the boy who died. "I don't know how, but I have to, somehow."

His 17-year-old son, Charlie L. Fackelman, is dead. Miss Beale is paralyzed from the waist down.

And Austin Oberle, 18, a new Whitmer High School graduate, and Randy Krell, a former Bedford school board member, have been convicted of felonies for their roles in the accident.

According to witness testimony, Krell, 52, chased a car filled with teenagers through Bedford Township the night of June 15, 2006, after one of them threw a bottle of water at his car.

The driver, Oberle, then 17, went through an intersection and hit a tree, killing Charlie Fackelman of Toledo and severely injuring Miss Beale of Bedford.

Oberle pleaded guilty last week to two felonies resulting from his role in the crash.

Krell pleaded not guilty, but a jury found him guilty of negligent homicide.

The jury's verdict last week was met by silence. There was some muffled whispers and weeping but no sudden healing, no applause.

"I needed to start placing faith somewhere and I put it in the trial," Mr. Fackelman said.

"I was expecting some sort of epiphany from all that, some life-changing moment, but it did not do that."

Mr. Fackelman and his wife, Janet, say they have lost something that cannot be regained.

"[The verdict] doesn't actually change our lives any," Mrs. Fackelman said.

"Maybe it's a little justice, but we've lost Charlie and we still have to deal with that on a day-to-day basis."

Mr. Fackelman is facing felony charges later this month for pulling a gun on Krell in March.

"There is still a lot more we have to go through," Mrs. Fackelman said.

Mr. Fackelman declined to talk about the pending case, except to say that he is getting psychiatric treatment and is working to get better.

When Mr. Beale first learned that Krell was the man who had chased the teenagers, it filled an emotional hole.

"It was a desperate feeling knowing the kids were being chased and not knowing who was chasing them," Mr. Beale said.

He said he couldn't sleep for months after the accident, and would instead drive around until the wee hours of the morning looking for the black Chrysler 300M identified at the scene of the crash.

"I get sick whenever I hear the name Krell," said Sheryl Beale, Miss Beale's mother.

The Fackelmans said they expected something more of Krell because he was the adult.

"I think it would have helped if he admitted his guilt," Mrs. Fackelman said.

"It would have shown some responsibility."

Charlie was just Charlie

Whenever a teammate needed to be cheered up, Charlie, 17, knew how to break the tension.

He was famous for singing the "Pina Colada" song "Escape" by Rupert Holmes on the Whitmer High School baseball field - which his teammates called "Fackel-daddy field," because he was always such a large part of the game.

"If you like Pina Coladas, and getting caught in the rain... come with me and escape," he would sing.

The red-haired, freckled boy who made everyone smile was the Panthers' pitcher and shortstop.

He was the older brother to 16-year-old twins, Jacob and Kelsey. And he was the last of an unbroken line of Charlies.

In the Fackelman family, a Charlie has been father to a Charlie since the beginning of the 19th century, Mr. Fackelman said.

But despite the distinguished line before him, there was no one quite like him.

"There were things that were Charlie-esque, but there's nothing I can say he's really like, he's just Charlie," said Matt LaPoint, the Panthers' baseball coach.

Friendship found

In seventh grade, Charlie wrote a note to his future self.

"Dear Future Me, 2007," the 2002 letter begins. "Hello, I'm writing to you because I don't want you to forget who you once were."

Charlie told his future self that going to college was nonnegotiable: "You're going, no questions asked," he wrote.

He also told himself never to forget his friends.

"You will need them and they will need you in the future," he wrote.

Charlie and Stevie Beale were best friends.

They went to the homecoming dance together, walked each other to class, and spent almost every weekend by each other's side.

They were part of, in their own lingo, the "CG" crew - cool guys, cool girls. And they were "SOW" with each other - so obsessed with.

Miss Beale's father, Alfie Beale, did not let her start dating until she was 16.

"They thought about dating but then they worried it would affect their friendship," Mr. Beale said. "But Charlie was definitely the boy I'd been waiting for to date my daughter."

The survivor

As a skilled trades millwright for Chrysler in Detroit, Mr. Beale's job was to fix the production lines when they broke.

"I kept everything running," said Mr. Beale, who recently took a buyout package.

Now he's using the skills of his trade to keep things running at home.

"You spend as much time with your kids as you can because in an instant life changes and not only because of a fault of your own but because of the choices of others," he said.

Mr. Beale recalls watching his daughter spray the lines of the soccer field at Bedford's YMCA the day of the accident.

"She noticed that there was a spot that hadn't been painted in the line, so she went back and filled it in," he remembered. "I was so proud of her that she paid attention to detail."

That, he said, was the last time he saw his daughter walk.

Miss Beale had five surgeries within 24 hours of the accident.

During her two-month stay in the hospital, she asked her parents to cover the windows with fabric so that she couldn't see the sunlight. She said the sun reminded her that she was unable to swim in her aunt's pool.

But she has since moved on from that early darkness and has managed to accomplish three of her four goals.

Her first goal was to get back to school. By the start of school on Sept. 6, she was back.

Next, she wanted to stand up for her prom photos. With the help of leg braces, she did.

And finally she said she would walk across the stage to receive her high school diploma. And again, the braces helped her along.

Now she wants feeling back in her legs so that she can walk completely on her own.

"Oh, she'll do it, buddy," Mr. Beale said recently. "She's a determined one, just wait and see."

Her growing independence and recovery are shown through the gradual stripping down of her wheelchair.

Miss Beale has removed her wheelchair's handles and taken off its "tippers" - a device, like training wheels, that prevents the chair from tipping over backwards - and she said she will soon discard the seatbealt that prevents her from falling forward.

Moving forward

Miss Beale goes to physical therapy five days a week "so I can remember how to walk, I guess," she said.

One of the programs she recently started is the Road to Independence Driving Program at Flower Hospital in Sylvania.

So despite fears of driving that have lingered after the crash, she is getting back behind the wheel.

"I feel like I haven't really changed that much," Miss Beale said. "But instead of being insecure about what I say, I now never forget to say I love you to anybody if that's what I really feel ... because you never know."

But she said Charlie surely knew how she felt about him.

"If you had a fake smile on, he could tell," she said.

She will attend Lourdes College in Sylvania this fall. Before her injury, she wanted to go to college farther from home, but "I probably would have ended up going wherever Charlie did," she said.

In terms of her emotions, the future psychology major said Charlie would be able to see right through her.

"I am happy, but yet I am still sad," she said. "I guess a lot of times my smile's not a real smile."

iconoclast  posted on  2008-03-01   9:18:34 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: iconoclast. the thread (#2)

What a horrible story - who benefits by incarcerating Charlie's father?

Lod  posted on  2008-03-01   10:43:43 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 15.

#17. To: lodwick (#15)

What a horrible story - who benefits by incarcerating Charlie's father?

Certainly not Krell, who might now fear retribution by the dad's sympathizers. If I were him, I'd have opposed such a sentence and work hard to have it reduced. Otherwise, I'd be moving to the other side of the country.

Pinguinite  posted on  2008-03-01 10:48:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: lodwick (#15)

What a horrible story - who benefits by incarcerating Charlie's father?

Good point

Leaving a mother and her two children left to deal with the loss of a son/sibling and then the husband/father! Yeah that is the way to do it!

lizza76  posted on  2008-03-01 13:59:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 15.

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