County Seal
Nassau County Home Contact Us
 
break
break
break
break
break
break
Nassau County District Attorney
Breadcrumb Start you are here >Home/

Glen Cove Man Receives Prison Term for 2007 Drugged Driving Fatality

Moss gets 2-6 years after family of victim speaks at sentencing

MINEOLA, NY – Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice announced today that Jeff Moss, 45, of Glen Cove, has been sentenced by a Nassau County judge to receive two to six years in prison as a result of his pleading guilty in September to the entirety of a 14-count indictment charging him with Manslaughter in the Second Degree, Criminally Negligent Homicide, and Driving Under the Influence of Drugs. The indictment stemmed from a fatal May 2007 car crash involving six vehicles.  Killed in the chain-reaction crash was 60-year-old Antonia Brancia, of Mansfield, Connecticut.

Before sentencing the defendant, Nassau County Judge David Sullivan heard emotional testimony from the husband and the nephew of the victim.

Rice said that on the afternoon of May 12, 2007, Moss drove his 2006 Range Rover sport utility vehicle at a high rate of speed into a line of five vehicles waiting at a red light at the intersection of Glen Cove Road and Glen Head Road in Old Brookville. Antonia Brancia was sitting in the front passenger seat of a 2000 Subaru station wagon driven by her husband Sjef van den Berg, 60. Their car was the last of five cars in line at the red light. The impact broke Brancia’s neck, killing her instantly. Her husband was left partially paralyzed. Both were former professors at the University of Connecticut.  Brancia and van den Berg were attending their son’s graduation from C.W. Post.

Other motorists involved in the crash suffered injuries ranging from neck and back injuries to broken ribs.

Rice said that blood drawn from the defendant after the crash revealed high levels of gamma-Hydroxybutyric acid, or GHB, in his system.  GHB is a central nervous system depressant used to treat a variety of medical issues.  The drug can also be taken illegally as a recreational intoxicant or by body builders looking for an increase in human growth hormone.  Rice said that the intoxicating effects of the drug can mirror a person’s use of alcohol.

Moss pleaded guilty to Manslaughter in the Second Degree, Vehicular Manslaughter in the Second Degree, Criminally Negligent Homicide, Assault in the Second Degree, Vehicular Assault in the Second Degree, five counts of Assault in the Third Degree, Reckless Endangerment in the Second Degree, Operating a Motor Vehicle While Under the Influence of Drugs, Driving While Ability Impaired by the Combined Influence of Drugs and Reckless Driving.  He faced a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison. 

Assistant District Attorney Anna Acquafredda of the DA’s County Court Trial Bureau, and Matthew Lampert, of the DA’s Vehicular Crimes Bureau, handled the case for the District Attorney’s Office.  Moss is being represented by Stephen Scaring, Esq.