WILLITS, Calif. (AP) — Officials shared grisly details of the deaths of a family whose SUV plunged off a cliff off Northern California’s coast during a coroner’s inquest Wednesday to help them classify the deaths.
Law enforcement officials and a forensic pathologist testified on the first of two days of testimony before a jury that will decide whether the March 2018 deaths of Jen and Sarah Hart and their six adopted children were accidental, a murder-suicide or undetermined.
The crash happened just days after authorities in Washington state, where the family moved in 2017 from Oregon, opened an investigation following allegations the children were being neglected.
The bodies of the women were inside the SUV when it was discovered, but one of them fell out as the vehicle was being towed up the cliff off the coast of Mendocino County, Sheriff Deputy Robert Julian said.
The bodies of siblings Markis, Jeremiah and Abigail Har were found same day near the car. Weeks later, the body of Ciera Hart was pulled from the Pacific Ocean and human remains found in a shoe were matched to Hannah Hart through DNA testing. The remains of 15-year-old Devonte Hart have not been found.
Jennifer Hart was drunk when she drove her large family off a Northern California cliff, authorities said.
Greg Pizarro, a forensic pathologist, testified Wednesday an autopsy found she had an alcohol level of 0.102. California drivers are considered drunk with a level of 0.08 or higher.
Pizarro said her cause of death was a broken neck.
Her wife, Sarah, and several children had large amounts of a drug in their systems that can cause drowsiness, authorities have said.
The family’s SUV plunged off a seaside cliff more than 160 miles (250 kilometers) north of San Francisco.