Mexican national sentenced for DWI deaths
Posted at: 08/11/2009 9:03 AM
| Updated at: 08/11/2009 9:23 AM
By: Reed Upton, KOB.com

Cesar Ramirez-Romero in court
A Mexican National who has lived in the Santa Fe area for 12 years has been sentenced to seven and a half years in prison followed by deportation for a drunken crash that killed two people in March.
The Santa Fe New Mexican reports that Cesar Ramirez-Olivas was so inebriated after the crash that he could hardly walk and he mumbled his speech.
His blood-alcohol content was 0.18 when his blood was drawn four hours after the crash that killed 48-year-old David Romero and 41-year-old Ramona Miera, according to the report. Anyone with a blood-alcohol level of 0.08 is legally preseumed to be intoxicated.
Romero and Miera were on a motorcycle south of Taos when they were struck head on by Ramirez-Olivas. Romero, of rancho de Taos, died at the scene. Miera, of Farmington, was airlifted to Christus St. Vincent Hospital in Santa Fe where she later died.
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