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Phila.
driver sentenced in boy's death
A Mayfair man who was driving drunk when he killed a boy, 12, in 2004
got four to eight years in prison.
By Robert Moran
Inquirer Staff Writer
A Mayfair man has been sentenced to four to eight years in prison
for killing a 12-year-old boy while driving drunk on Thanksgiving
2004, and he also incurred the family's wrath during yesterday's hearing.
William
Halloran Jr., 30, was convicted in March of running down Peter Roberto
Jr. with an SUV on Harbison Avenue in Northeast Philadelphia, getting
out of the car to see the fatally injured boy, then walking away to
find a lawyer.
"I
never imagined it would be an adult, let alone a father" who
would have committed the crime and left the child in the middle of
the street "like a dead animal," said the boy's mother,
Dolores Roberto, 36, of the city's Somerton section.
Halloran,
a married father of three, later turned himself in, accompanied by
his stepfather, a former police officer who worked in accident investigation.
Halloran
sat in court facing forward with his hands clasped, appearing somewhat
dazed, sometimes dropping his head or rubbing the bridge of his nose
with a hand that quivered.
The packed
courtroom was evenly divided between family and friends of the victim
and of Halloran.
When he
was offered a chance to speak, Halloran turned very briefly to the
Roberto family to apologize. Facing forward again, he responded to
repeated observations by the boy's family that he appeared stone-faced
and unemotional during his jury trial.
"The
truth is," he said with a cracking voice, "I'm scared. I'm
confused. I'm deeply saddened by this. I don't know what to do."
Maybe the
Roberto family would someday forgive him, he said. But "I'm going
to have a hard time forgiving myself," he added.
A tearful
Peter Roberto Sr., 40, asked Judge M. Teresa Sarmina to send a message
that drinking and driving will not be tolerated.
Halloran,
a tall man who wore a black suit, stood as the judge sentenced him
to a minimum four years in prison and another four years of probation.
For the
duration of any parole or his probation, he will not be allowed to
drive, Sarmina ruled. He also will have to serve 100 hours of community
service speaking to high school students about the consequences of
drinking and driving.
Halloran
was ordered to pay $7,485 restitution for the boy's funeral and $1,159
for the headstone.
Peter Roberto
Sr., a Philadelphia correctional officer, said he had hoped for a
longer prison sentence, but accepted the judge's decision.
He and his
family, besides excoriating Halloran, celebrated their son in their
statements. The boy underwent multiple surgeries for tumors in his
ears and needed to wear hearing aids, but that didn't stop him from
having a rich childhood or serving as an inspiration to others, his
family said.
The summer
before he was killed, he and his friends started to build an elaborate
treehouse. His friends completed the project after his death.
"It
serves as a tribute to Peter and who he was," his mother said.
The family
also maintains a memorial Web site at www.peterrobertojr.com, which
features photos of him riding dirt bikes, fishing, and dressing up
in costumes.
His mother
quoted from an essay he once wrote: "I try to get the most out
of life."
Contact staff writer Robert Moran at 215-854-5983 or bmoran@phillynews.com.
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