On June 26, 2020, Ryan Paul Miettinen听Jr., 22, struck and killed Coleen Huling, 29, and Melissa Williamson, 25, with his Mercury Mountaineer SUV in London Township, Michigan. He fled the scene, and according to the听, never surrendered the vehicle to authorities. Miettinen was charged with two counts of failure to stop at the scene of an accident when at fault, resulting in death. Last week听he struck a plea deal. A听county judge听sentenced him to 9 to 40 years in prison on each count. Miettinen must serve at least 18 of those years before becoming eligible for parole, and could spend all 80 years behind bars. The judge also ordered Miettinen to pay a total of $250,200 in restitution.
国产吃瓜黑料 Online听covered the deaths of Huling and Williamson in December, as part of our #2020CyclingDeaths听project, in which we tracked every cyclist killed by a driver over 12 months. At year鈥檚 end, we wrote obituaries for nine of those听riders, which听included those of Huling and Williamson, a young couple who met through mutual friends, loved exploring the rivers and trails near their home in Ypsilanti, Michigan,听and had just signed a lease to move in together. The Friday afternoon they were killed, the pair听were riding their bikes from Huling鈥檚 parents鈥 home, where they had been pet-sitting, into town to get some food.

鈥淣o amount of time will bring our daughters back,鈥 says Matthew Williamson, Melissa鈥檚 father, who is also a cyclist and had been training with his daughter for the 328-mile Pan Ohio Hope Ride in the weeks leading up to her death. But Miettinen鈥檚 sentencing does bring to end the ten-month limbo of court dates and litigation for the two families. 鈥淚t allows for all of us to begin the healing process,鈥 he says.
A maximum sentence like this is rare. In a recent study, data was collected by cycling advocate David Cranor for the nonprofit Greater Greater Washington. Between 1971 and 2019, there were 132 cyclists killed by drivers in the Washington, D.C., area, and 87 percent of the drivers weren鈥檛 charged with a crime. Only 8 percent served time. In the 697 deaths we tracked in 2020, we found reports of criminal charges in only a small handful of cases. More often听cases go the way of the one involving John Giumarra III, who was charged with a 听after killing Angela Holder in Bakersfield, California, in 2017. Giumarra had a blood-alcohol level of 0.18, a record that showed multiple DUI charges, and he left the scene. Still, the judge ordered Giumarra to complete a mere 90 days of custody via work release,听100 hours of community service, and听five years of probation. More recently the news reported on the high-profile case of former NBA star , who was riding his bike when he was struck from behind by a driver and paralyzed. Though she also left the scene, the听driver was .
鈥淕enerally speaking, drivers who kill cyclists, even in obscenely negligent circumstances, rarely face criminal consequences that equate to the atrocity of their actions,鈥 says Peter Flax, former editor in chief at Bicycling and a lifelong bike advocate听who has written extensively about traffic safety for cyclists. 鈥淭ypically, to get a sentence that lines up with a fatally negligent act,听the motorist needs to meet at least one of a few special criteria鈥攖o be massively impaired by drugs or alcohol, to be driving at a crazy speed, or to be a nonwhite driver who kills a white victim.鈥
Miettinen is reported to have been driving recklessly when he hit Huling听and Williamson鈥攈e swerved, struck them, and then sped away and eluded police for hours. His speed was in excess of 60 miles per hour;听. The investigation showed that Miettinen had been smoking marijuana earlier in the day, though intoxication could not be proven. Miettinen has an arrest record that includes 13 prior offenses, including felonious assault with a deadly weapon, aggravated assault, reckless driving, and disobeying a police officer.听
鈥淎s a cyclist myself, I am all too aware that many individuals are under-prosecuted in these circumstances,鈥 says Matthew Williamson, who had been hoping for the maximum punishment.听鈥淪ometimes it is due to lack of existing case law. Other times it is because of an underlying perception that bikes have no business on the road.鈥澨
鈥淚n general, the criminal-justice system looks at cycling cases鈥攎eaning a driver hitting a cyclist鈥攁s 鈥榡ust an accident,鈥欌 says Megan Hottman, an attorney in Golden, Colorado, who has been handling cycling cases for 11 years. (国产吃瓜黑料听published a profile of Hottman in 2015. It was written by cyclist and听longtime 国产吃瓜黑料 contributor Andrew Tilin, who was later struck and killed by a driver in Austin, Texas, while changing a flat tire by the side of the road.) An avid cyclist herself, Hottman has dedicated her life to advocating for cyclists and holding drivers accountable for their crimes. But in her entire听career, she鈥檚 only seen a few drivers adequately sentenced, she says. These cases are automatically made lower priority because district attorneys want to focus their time and attention on the 鈥渞eally bad criminals,鈥 she says, even though the damages caused in driver-cyclist crashes听can be expensive and life altering, resulting in death or spinal-cord and brain injuries. Cases involving a driver hitting a cyclist are often classified as traffic violations, rather than misdemeanors or felony offenses, and overwhelmed courts move these violations through the system as quickly as possible, she says.听
In a successful case, where a driver gets the maximum sentence, as Miettinen did, Hottman says it鈥檚 due to the perfect combination of law enforcement doing an exceptional job, a prosecutor asking for the maximum sentence and being willing to take it to trial, and a judge who really pays attention to the case and allows the family and loved ones to come in and talk in court. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so significant when a judge shows a case like this the attention it deserves,鈥 she says.听
In an impact statement to the court, Kerri Williamson, Melissa鈥檚 mother, wrote that the average life expectancy for a woman today is 76 years. 鈥淪o, in my opinion, Ryan stole 51 years of Melissa鈥檚 life and 47 from Coleen.听Even if he had been sentenced to 98 years in prison it would not have been an 鈥榚ye for an eye.鈥櫶鼿e will continue to get to have contact with those he loves. I can鈥檛 say that I am 鈥榟appy鈥, because I feel that is doing an injustice to my daughter and Coleen, but it is what I had hoped for.鈥 Kerri says that now听she and her family听and Huling鈥檚 family听need to give themselves permission to move on,听and听鈥渢o live the way Melissa and Coleen would have wanted us to.鈥