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Actor Was Driving In Fatal Crash Of 17-Year-Old Vahagn Setian

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  • Actor Was Driving In Fatal Crash Of 17-Year-Old Vahagn Setian

    ACTOR WAS DRIVING IN FATAL CRASH OF 17-YEAR-OLD VAHAGN SETIAN
    By Erika Hayasaki, Richard Winton and Jessica Garrison
    Times Staff Writers

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-b evhills5dec05,0,3251536.story?coll=la-home-headlin es
    December 5, 2006

    Inquiry begins into why a Beverly Hills High student, who died,
    and 2 girls were in the SUV.

    Police and school officials Monday were investigating why three
    teenagers were riding with a TV actor when his Land Rover struck
    a tree Saturday, killing a 17-year-old Beverly Hills High School
    student and critically injuring the two others.

    Lane Garrison, 26, a co-star of the Fox television drama "Prison
    Break," showed signs of "alcohol intoxication" when he was questioned
    by police, said Lt. Mitch McCann of the Beverly Hills Police
    Department. Alcohol containers were found inside the SUV, he said.

    Garrison has not been arrested, and law enforcement sources said
    detectives are awaiting the results of the actor's blood test.

    His lawyer, Harland Braun, said the actor "doesn't remember anything
    about the accident.... He thinks he was driving but he can't swear
    to it."

    Police, however, put Garrison behind the wheel when he lost control
    of his SUV and crashed into a tree in the 300 block of South Beverly
    Drive.

    The crash killed 17-year-old Vahagn Setian. Two 15-year-old girls
    who also were in the vehicle were taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

    One has been released from the hospital and the other is in serious
    condition, officials said.

    The girls do not attend Beverly Hills High, and authorities did not
    release information about them.

    According to Braun, Garrison met the teens, who were fans, at a grocery
    store and accompanied them to a party, where he had one drink. About
    an hour later, the actor left the party to meet a female friend and
    the teens asked if they could go with him, Braun said.

    Garrison said yes.

    The next thing Garrison recalled was waking up at Century City Doctors
    Hospital -- where he was treated for minor injuries -- with a taxicab
    voucher in his lap, Braun said.

    "There is always the possibility that someone put something in the
    drink," Braun said, adding that the blood test would show that.

    "We're still trying to figure out what happened," said the lawyer,
    adding that Garrison was having trouble with his vehicle's brakes and
    the SUV pulled to the right. He said police would examine the vehicle.

    Garrison, who lives in Beverly Hills, was "despondent" and
    "overwhelmed" by the incident, Braun said.

    Police said "the investigation into Mr. Garrison's impairment is
    ongoing."

    "Mr. Garrison is not related to any one of the people in the car,"
    McCann said.

    Beverly Hills police brought in crash-scene investigators to try to
    reconstruct the accident. McCann said in such cases it usually takes
    six to eight weeks for some action on the incident.

    On Monday, students arrived at Beverly Hills High wearing green,
    Setian's favorite color. The guitar player and former drama student
    was known for sporting a green Rastafarian-style beret.

    With grief counselors on hand, school officials dismissed students
    early for a memorial at the crash site.

    News about the crash spread quickly among students via text messages,
    e-mail and cellphones. By 3 p.m. Sunday, more than 100 students
    had locked hands around a candlelight memorial in Roxbury Park near
    the campus, where students placed flowers and cartons of Dunhills,
    Setian's favorite brand of cigarettes.

    Juilan Wan, 16, said Setian was one of his best friends. The two
    boys had breakfast together on the day of the accident. Wan said that
    Setian knew he was leaving for Japan at the end of the month and gave
    him a rosary.

    Wan recalled that Setian told him: "When we can't be together, this
    is how I want you to remember me."

    "It felt like this was coming," Wan said. "Nothing was left unsaid.

    He knew he was one of my best friends."

    Friends nicknamed Setian "Va Häagen-Dazs," like the ice cream. Wan
    said he did not know why Setian got into the car with Garrison on
    Saturday, but his half-Greek, half-Armenian friend always "lived for
    the moment."

    Beverly Hills High student Katie Havard, 16, remembered when Setian
    had a crush on her a few years ago, and used to carry her picture in
    his wallet.

    "He was friends with every group at our school," she said. "From the
    smart kids to the jocks to the stoners ... this has really brought
    us together. There wasn't a student at our school who was more
    universally loved."

    Havard's mother, Melissa, said the tragedy reminds students that
    "your life is not infallible." She said she hopes this will lead to
    student discussions at school about drinking and driving.

    "People are human and they make mistakes, especially teens," she said,
    adding that now is not the time to wag a finger at them. "Right now
    it's a time to give them love."

    Student body president Josh Tucker, 17, said the campus was in shock
    and that teachers had a hard time conducting classes.

    Setian was "one of those kids that everybody knows in the school,"
    Tucker said. "Everyone has the same story" on the impact he had on
    their lives.

    The school was reeling from the accident, said Myra Lurie, president
    of the Beverly Hills Unified School District Board of Education.

    "We're all very sad," she said, adding that the community was baffled
    as to what Setian was doing in the SUV with the actor.

    "Nobody knows. It's just very odd," she said. "We have no idea how
    it all transpired."

    Garrison plays one of the escaped convicts on "Prison Break." In an
    interview with People magazine in May, Garrison said he once was a
    troubled teenager who turned his life around.

    At 15, after a botched attempt to steal a jug of wine from a stranger's
    garage, he ran home, where, he said, "my mother just slapped the crap
    out of me. She drove me to the police station. The cops handcuffed
    me and put me in a cell to scare me."

    Garrison was sentenced to community service and spent a lot of time
    mowing lawns.

    He told People that when he was 17, he moved in with his family's
    minister, Joe Simpson, the father of pop singer and actress Jessica
    Simpson.

    "I'm very grateful to him," he told the magazine, adding, "Jessica
    and I grew up together."

    *

    [email protected]

    ri [email protected]

    jessica.garrison@latimes .com

    Times staff writer Jean Guccione contributed to this report.

    --Boundary_(ID_zhFcuIkxa924eSyRPNOWGg)--
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