No one called 911 as Georgia accident victim lay dying in a ditch *GUILTY*

Eric Keais.png
A case to watch.
A man died- was this criminal or a very unfortunate circumstances?

Ga. lawmaker, police chief’s response to wreck under review


Sept. 11, 2019

Eric Keais spent most of the last moments of his life gravely injured in a ditch.

The 38-year-old house painter had been riding a bicycle when he was hit by an SUV in Cedartown, Instead of calling 911, the driver Ralph Dover III left the scene and called his friend, state Rep. Trey Kelley. Instead of calling 911, Kelley, who works as a lawyer, called the Cedartown police chief, who also didn’t call 911.

All three men have said they initially thought the SUV had struck an animal, not a person. The driver and Kelley said they looked around the scene and didn’t see Keais in the ditch, which was thick with brush. When a police sergeant found Keais and called for an ambulance ⁠— more than an hour after the crash ⁠— Keais was still alive. He was later pronounced dead at the hospital.

The wreck and its aftermath has been investigated by the Georgia State Patrol and is now under review by the office of Polk County District Attorney Jack Browning.

Eric Keais spent most of the last moments of his life gravely injured in a ditch.

The 38-year-old house painter had been riding a bicycle when he was hit by an SUV in Cedartown, about 60 miles northwest of Atlanta. Instead of calling 911, the driver left the scene and called his friend, state Rep. Trey Kelley, according to police documents. Instead of calling 911, Kelley, who works as a lawyer, called the Cedartown police chief, who also didn’t call 911, records show.

All three men have said they initially thought the SUV had struck an animal, not a person. The driver and Kelley said they looked around the scene and didn’t see Keais in the ditch, which was thick with brush.

When a police sergeant found Keais and called for an ambulance ⁠— more than an hour after the crash ⁠— Keais was still alive. He was later pronounced dead at the hospital.

The Sept. 11, 2019, wreck and its aftermath has been investigated by the Georgia State Patrol and is now under review by the office of Polk County District Attorney Jack Browning. Polk County Coroner Tony Brazier is alarmed by what he learned while looking into the wreck and how it was handled by driver Ralph Dover III, Kelley and Police Chief Jamie Newsome. “They should have contacted 911 immediately. They should’ve got help out there.”

Kelley who serves as the House majority whip, said he contacted Newsome after seeing a bicycle in the ditch. “At that time, I still did not know another human being was involved. I fully cooperated with law enforcement.”


Dover and Kelley had seen each other at the Polk County Fair before the wreck. After Dover left the fair, he drove south on Main Street through Cedartown. The vehicle struck Keais, who flew off the bike and into the ditch, according to police records. The estimated time of the wreck was 8:25 p.m. The collision left the front of the SUV crushed in and streaked with red paint from the bike. Dover kept driving for about a mile and stopped at a gas station, where he called Kelley at 8:28.

Kelley heard distress in Dover’s voice but couldn’t figure out what was wrong. It seemed Dover thought his car had hit an animal. Kelley met Dover at the gas station, and they went to the wreck scene. “After arriving and driving up and down the road,” Kelley said in the statement, “I saw nothing that indicated a life or death situation.”

At some point, Kelley spotted the victim’s bike on the side of the road and called Newsome at home. The call was placed at 9:11 p.m., almost 50 minutes after the estimated crash time.

Kelley asked Newsome if he knew Dover and described the events of the night, beginning with the fair and ending at the wreck scene, Newsome’s statement said. Until Kelley mentioned the bicycle, though, Newsome said he thought the call was meant to seek guidance on filing a vehicle damage report.

“What?” Newsome said, according to the police report. “He might’ve hit a person?” Instead of calling 911, Newsome sent a sergeant. to the scene. While looking around near the bicycle, the sergeant saw something white in the ditch, got closer and realized it was a sock. Then he found Keais, still breathing faintly, and called for an ambulance at 9:28 p.m.

ER staffers worked to save him but pronounced him dead at 10:15 p.m.

DA Browning said his office recently received the investigative files on the wreck and will soon determine “who will be charged for the incident that resulted in Mr. Keais’ tragic death.” He will take the case to the grand jury in the coming weeks.


Among the files Browning received were records from Brazier, who said he ruled the death a homicide by vehicle. Brazier said the case could have turned out differently if someone had dialed 911 sooner.

 
Last edited by a moderator:

GA rep, driver indicted in connection to fatal Cedartown crash where cyclist was left dying in ditch​

A Grand Jury has indicted a Georgia representative in connection to a fatal crash that happened in 2019.

According to the documents obtained by 11Alive, Rep. Trey Kelley has been indicted on the charge of reckless conduct after not immediately calling 911 to report a hit-and-run accident, constituting a "gross deviation from the standard of care which a reasonable person would exercise in the situation," the indictment said.

In the same indictment, Dover, was formally charged with hit-and-run.
 

Hearing set for Friday as defense for State Rep. Trey Kelley seek to quash indictment​

A legal move in the case of the State of Georgia vs. State Rep. Trey Kelley is coming up on Friday with a hearing scheduled for the Polk County Courthouse at 10 a.m.

The defense is seeking a motion to quash the indictment on a single misdemeanor charge of reckless conduct for his involvement in the hit and run death of Eric Keais in September 2019.

The motion to quash the indictment is a procedural move made by the defense in an attempt to get the charges dropped before having to proceed onward to a trial.
 

Man at center of politically charged and deadly hit-and-run appears in court​

Published December 2, 2022
For the first time in over three years, the man at the center of a politically charged and deadly hit-and-run accident in September 2019, was seen at the Polk County Courthouse.

Ryan Dover, was in court to finally find out the status of the felony against him.

The hearing was over in less than ten minutes, but an important step was taken. A trial date of early March next years has been set. The three-year-old hit-and-run case is now on track to be resolved.
 

Trial in Cedartown Eric Keais hit-and-run case set for May​

The trial for an Aragon man accused in the fatal hit-and-run that killed a man on a bicycle in Cedartown has been tentatively set for May.
 
Shades of the South Dakota attorney general and the KC coach/son of coach imo. Who are they worried about after harming someone? Themselves.
 

Cedartown hit-and-run trial pushed to July as defendant opts for bench trial​

The trial of an Aragon man accused in a fatal hit-and-run that led to the death of Eric Keais in 2019 has been delayed again after the defendant requested a bench trial.

A jury trial was scheduled to begin on May 15 in Polk County Superior Court with Cobb County Senior Judge Mary Staley Clark presiding. Dover’s attorney, Brian McWhorter, filed a jury trial waiver with the court clerk’s office on April 27 requesting a bench trial.

Court Clerk Stacie Baines confirmed the new trial date of July 24. Clark, a retired Cobb superior court judge, was selected to preside over the trial after Polk County Superior Court Chief Judge Mark Murphy recused himself early in the case’s history.
 
Shades of the South Dakota attorney general and the KC coach/son of coach imo. Who are they worried about after harming someone? Themselves.

I remember that. Yep. Self aborbed. Only worried about the possibilities of what could happen to THEM! After what THEY did. Alot of times it us because they were drunk or distracted and wasn't just an unfortunate accident. It would have never happened. No thought for the victim. Just saving their own
( _ I _ )
 

Grand Jury to decide whether to charge state lawmaker and others after deadly accident​

Last September, Eric Keais was riding his red mountain style bike down North Main Street in Cedartown. Suddenly, he was hit from the rear by an SUV.


"This man is not alive. Justice hasn't been saved. Why does it take over a year. Nobody has been arrested. Nobody got any tickets. Nothing," said Hamilton.

The case went to the Polk County District Attorney Jack Browning.

But then COVID-19 hit. The courts were shut down. Now, 13 months later, Browning is finally presenting cases to a grand jury. A second grand jury panel is set to begin hearing cases in December.
The details of this sound very similar almost identical to the AG South Dakota case. Sickening. Public officals, lies, calling someone in power or LE to help cover up while the dead victim matters not at all.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Ren
The details of this sound very similar almost identical to the AG South Dakota case. Sickening. Public officals, lies, calling someone in power or LE to help cover up while the dead victim matters not at all.
If I hadn't noticed the state, I would have assumed it was the same case.
 

Judge hands down guilty verdict in fatal Cedartown hit-and-run trial​

An Aragon man’s decisions in the minutes after he hit a Cedartown man on a bicycle with his vehicle nearly four years ago led a judge to find him guilty on hit and run and reckless conduct charges Tuesday.

Ralph “Ryan” Dover III was driving south on North Main Street in Cedartown the evening of Sept. 11, 2019, when he struck Eric Keais, who was traveling in the same direction. Prosecutors said because Dover didn’t immediately report the incident to proper authorities it stretched out the time before Keais got medical care, leading to his death.

Testimony indicated that Dover drove more than half of a mile down the road after the collision to a convenience store instead of stopping sooner. He didn’t call police or 911, instead calling a friend, State Rep. Trey Kelley.

Dover was convicted on charges of felony hit and run resulting in serious injury or death and misdemeanor reckless conduct. Cobb County Senior Judge Mary Staley Clark presided over the bench trial in Polk County Superior Court, which lasted two days. Dover waived his right to a jury trial through his attorney in April.

Sentencing is tentatively scheduled for Aug. 29. The maximum sentence allowed under state law for a conviction of hit and run resulting in serious injury or death is five years.


Tallapoosa Judicial Circuit District Attorney Jack Browning built up the timeline of events for the judge, noting that Dover struck the bicycle ridden by Keais at around 8:30 p.m. in the southbound lanes of North Main Street across the road from a shopping center.

Browning said it wasn’t until around 40 minutes later that any law enforcement personnel was notified. It was even longer before Keais was found by Cedartown police down an embankment on the side of the road and emergency medical services were called out to the scene.

Testifying Monday, Dr. Stacey Desamours, who supervised the autopsy of Keais for the GBI medical examiner’s office, said that the victim’s injuries, while serious and life-threatening, were treatable and survivable had he been attended to within minutes of being injured.
 
No one called 911 as victim lies dying.

Perp calls friend, State Rep Trey Kelley.

Perp is charged, possible maximum five years.

Despite the fact the victim would have lived and his injuries were treatable and survivable had help been called for.

Wow. What a system.

Five years. And who thinks he will serve five?

Let's be silent like the perp was and the ones in the thread headline of no one calling 911 as he lay dying in a ditch.
 

Dover gets maximum five year sentence in Hit-and-Run death of Eric Keais​

The sentencing hearing concluded this morning with the outcome that a family who are left with a hole in their lives feels was right.

Ralph “Ryan” Dover III will be spending half a decade behind bars as Judge Mary Staley decided to hand down the maximum possible sentence of five years in the hit-and-run death of Eric Keais in September 2019.

“(I’m) pleased we were able to bring closure for the family,” Browning told Polk Today. “The family addressed the court and, while expressing sorrow that no court proceeding can possibly fill the hole left by Eric’s untimely and senseless death, they were pleased with the outcome and the attention and concern shown by all in the court system throughout Eric’s case.”

The sentencing came just weeks shy of the fourth anniversary of Keais’ death.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
2,893
Messages
221,152
Members
902
Latest member
Seminary
Back
Top