Bulgarian Skating Champ Staviiski : I Am Ready to Accept Any Sentence (我已准备接受任何判决)
26 September 2007, Wednesday
Bulgaria's ice-dancing champion Maxim Staviiski told reporters he is ready to accept any kind of sentence that could be imposed on him over causing the deadly crash, which killed one man last month. Photo by Yuliana Nikolova (Sofia Photo Agency)
Bulgaria's ice-dancing champion Maxim Staviiski told reporters on Wednesday he is ready to accept any kind of sentence that could be imposed on him over causing the deadly crash, which killed one man last month.
"I am very sorry about the accident. I do not wish even to my enemies to experience what I am going through now," Staviiski said before entering the building of the Regional Prosecutor's Office in the city of Burgas.
The skater added he is not allowed to give more details concerning the course of investigation.
"I do my best to help Manuela Gorsova, who is still in a coma, from the very first moment and I acquire information about her condition every day," Staviiski said in answer to questions concerning the 19-year-old girl, who has suffered the most serious injuries in the crash.
Maxim Staviiski has been officially charged with negligent manslaughter and causing aggravated bodily harm of a person, while under the influence of alcohol. The bill of indictment emphasizes that Maxim helped the victims after the crash.
On September 5 Maxim Staviiski, was granted a bail of BGN 2000. He was banned from leaving Bulgaria because of the grave crime that he committed.
Suspicions of a cover-up are surrounding the investigation into last month's crash on a bridge near the Black Sea city of Burgas that killed one man and injured another three.
The case was assigned not to one but to three prosecutors in a row and Staviiski was questioned for the first time a whole month after the deadly crash.
The crash, between skater's Hummer sport utility vehicle and two cars, occurred August 5 on a bridge near the Black Sea city of Burgas.
Staviiski veered into the opposite lane and bumped headlong into a Honda Civic with four people riding in it. The driver of the Honda Petar Petrov, 24, died in a hospital and one of his passengers - a 19-year-old Manuela Gorsova - was hospitalised in a coma.
The blood alcohol test has shown that Staviiski had 1.1 permilles of alcohol in his blood. The legal driving limit in Bulgaria is 0.5. |