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Former NJ Transit Bus Driver Sentenced to Prison for Driving Over Passenger

Newark

Acting Essex County Prosecutor Theodore N. Stephens, II, announced today that Fayola Howard, 36, of Bloomfield, an NJ Transit bus operator at the time of the crime, was sentenced to five years in New Jersey State Prison for causing the death of a passenger, Kevin Thomas, 55, of Newark.

The Honorable Ronald D. Wigler, Judge of the Superior Court, imposed the sentence yesterday. Under the No Early Release Act, Howard must serve 85 percent of her sentence before she is eligible for parole. 

On May 6, Howard entered a guilty plea admitting she caused the death of Thomas on December 31, 2019, while operating an NJ Transit bus.

Thomas stepped off the bus to give a pocketbook to a woman who had left her pocketbook on the bus. When he attempted to return to the front door of the bus, Howard closed the door on Thomas’s arm.

Rather than release him, Howard pulled away from the stop dragging Thomas even as he and other passengers yelled for her to stop the bus. The bus then turned right, at which point Thomas came free from the bus, fell, and the bus ran him over. 

Thomas died from his injuries on January 6, 2020. At the time of the incident, the bus was near the intersection of Sanford Avenue and Mt. Vernon Place in Newark.

Howard was convicted of reckless vehicular homicide, leaving the scene of the accident resulting in death and tampering with records. At the time of her arrest on February 18, 2020, she was attempting to board a plane at Newark Airport.

She is a native of Trinidad and is expected to face deportation proceedings following the completion of her sentence.

Assistant Prosecutor Adam B. Wells, who handled the case, said, “Mr. Thomas was a kind and generous man who died acting as a good Sarmatian trying to help a stranger.

The defendant’s crimes robbed his family and community of a loving brother, father and grandfather.

While the vehicular homicide statute limits the sentence in these cases, I hope this sentence can bring the family some sense of justice.’’

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