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Marina owner convicted in fatal 2008 boat crash settles new environmental protection case

By The Associated Press - | Sep 8, 2023

FILE - Erica Blizzard thinks about the last time she saw her friend Staphanie Beaudoin before crashing her boat into an Island on Lake Winnipeasukee in 2008 as she took the witness stand in Belknap County Superior Court in Laconia, N.H., Monday, March 15, 2010. Blizzard, convicted of killing her best friend in the crash on Lake Winnipesaukee 15 years ago, has agreed to pay the state $100,000 to settle new allegations that she interfered with an environmental investigation at the marina she owns. (AP Photo/Jim Cole, File)

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A New Hampshire woman convicted of killing her best friend in a boat crash on Lake Winnipesaukee 15 years ago has agreed to pay the state $100,000 to settle new allegations that she interfered with an environmental protection investigation at the marina she owns.

The attorney general and state Department of Environmental Services announced the settlement with Erica Blizzard, owner of Lakeport Landing Marina in Laconia, on Thursday. According to authorities, marina employees severed a fuel line while repairing a dock in August 2021, failed to adequately notify the state, and continued to dispense fuel after a making a faulty repair. Blizzard was accused of hindering the state’s investigation into the fuel line damage until confronted several weeks later.

Blizzard, did not admit to the allegations in settling the case. Her attorney, Biron Bedard, said Thursday the settlement represents “the cost of the litigation.”

“The allegations recited in the press release were never proven and consistently denied in the litigation,” he said in email, referring to the press release issued by the state.

Officials said Blizzard cooperated with authorities after being confronted with evidence of the improperly repaired fuel line. The state agreed to suspend $35,000 of the penalty for 10 years provided the marina complies with underground storage tank rules and laws.

In 2008, Blizzard was head of the New Hampshire Recreational Boaters Association when she plowed her high-performance boat into a rock ledge after a night of drinking. Stephanie Beaudoin, of Meredith, died, and another passenger was injured. Blizzard was acquitted of an alcohol-related charge but found guilty of negligent homicide and sentenced to six months in jail.

The day after she was convicted in March 2010, Blizzard was charged with driving 84 mph in a 65 mph zone on Interstate 93 and almost running down the trooper who tried to wave her down as she fumbled with her cellphone.

Judge Kathleen McGuire referenced the speeding charge when she sentenced Blizzard for the boat crash.

“You’ve got to wonder how anyone responsible for an accident because of negligent operation could engage in such conduct,” she said. “You would think that she would be the most cautious person in the world after that. There has to be some disconnect there.”

Blizzard was found guilty of negligent driving for the speeding charge and was fined $250. In 2016, she was ticketed for texting while driving, pleaded no contest and was fined $124.

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