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May 27, 2009 | Dayton Courts: Legal and crime news
 

Home > Blogs > Dayton Courts: Legal and crime news > Archives > 2009 > May > 27

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Police arrest woman indicted on aggravated vehicular homicide charges stemming from November accident

DAYTON — A woman indicted on charges that she killed one passenger and severely injured another while driving intoxicated was arrested by Dayton police Wednesday, May 27.

Felicia D. Burg, 25, was booked into the Montgomery County Jail just before 8 a.m., according to jail records.

Felicia_Burg.jpg
Felicia D. Burg

Burg was indicted May 22 on two counts of aggravated vehicular homicide, two counts of aggravated vehicular assault and two counts of driving while intoxicated.

Burg was driving a Chevrolet Impala at 3 a.m. on Nov. 29 when she lost control while driving at a high rate of speed along North Main Street. The car slammed into an RTA utility pole near the intersection of Main and Lawn streets, ejecting two female passengers, according to police.

Cicely Shontee, 25, of Dayton, died at Miami Valley Hospital. Mykala Mercer, 21, is still recovering from her injuries, according to Greg Flannagan, spokesman for the Montgomery County Prosecutor’s Office.

Burg, who was trapped in the car and had to be cut out by fire crews, also was seriously injured, according to police

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Former coach Greenberg is indicted

DAYTON — A federal grand jury indicted former Chaminade Julienne High School girls basketball coach Marc Greenberg on 12 counts of using the Internet to transmit obscene material to individuals younger than 16.

The indictment was handed down Wednesday, May 27. No arraignment had been set as of Wednesday afternoon.

The indictment covers several dates between Feb. 19 and April 29, and the charges are the same as in the original complaint. FBI agents arrested Greenberg May 4.

Greenberg appeared May 7 before U.S. Magistrate Judge Sharon Ovington, who placed him under house arrest until an electronic monitoring system could be installed in his Centerville home. Once the system was up, Greenberg was allowed to leave home to go to work, meet with his attorney or seek court-ordered mental health evaluation and treatment.

Ovington ordered Greenberg, 32, not to associate with children under 18 except his own three kids; not to use a computer or any device capable of Internet access except in connection with his job; and to avoid any contact with present or past students, regardless of age. He was also ordered to surrender his passport and to stay in southern Ohio.

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