Milwaukee fatal hit-and-run crash; Luis Perez Garcia sentenced

Ausberto and Michael Gutierrez Ponce; Luis Perez Garcia

A man convicted of killing two brothers in a hit-and-run crash in Milwaukee was sentenced on Friday, Jan. 17 to 25-and-a-half years in prison plus another 15 years of extended supervision.

Sentencing in hit-and-run

What we know:

Luis Perez Garcia was convicted in the death of Michael and Ausberto Gonzalez Ponce. They were struck by an SUV speeding down Lincoln Avenue near 19th Street in May 2024. 

The crash happened around 2:45 a.m. A witness told police that she gave her neighbor, Ausberto, a ride home that night and double-parked in the bike lane, so he could get out, according to a criminal complaint. She said Ausberto had already gotten out, and Michael met them out on the street to talk. That's when a speeding vehicle hit her SUV and the brothers, she said, and drove off.

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Police found debris from the striking vehicle at the scene, which included pieces of plastic with "distinctive markings" on them, per the complaint. That debris was determined to be from a 2013-17 Chevrolet Traverse.

Surveillance video did not show the impact, but did show what appeared to be a 2013-2017 Chevrolet Traverse just west of the scene at the time. The complaint states no other vehicles drove past during that time frame leading up to and after the crash. The same SUV was later seen eastbound on Lincoln Avenue with damage to its passengers' side headlights – "consistent with having struck another object."

19th and Lincoln

Later that day, police found a Chevrolet Traverse with heavy damage to its front passenger side near 5th and Arthur – a little more than a mile from the crash scene. Neighbors told police who the SUV belonged to, the complaint states, and an officer went to knock on that door. Perez Garcia answered and was taken into custody.

The next day, detectives interviewed Perez-Garcia. Per the complaint, he admitted to causing the crash and leaving the scene. He said he had left a bar after he drank eight beers, but he "was not drunk" – rather, "buzzed." He also admitted he does not have a driver's license, and a review of Wisconsin Department of Transportation records found he had never been issued one.

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Perez Garcia is charged with two counts of hit-and-run resulting in death and two counts of knowingly operating a motor vehicle without a valid license causing death.

Part of Perez Garcia's sentence was tied to another drunk driving case that he was charged for just days before the hit-and-run. 

The Source: The information in this post was produced using online court records plus the criminal complaint in the case.

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