The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: March 30, 2025
Today: March 30, 2025

North Texas mother pushes for electronic ID law after son died in alcohol-related crash

February 21, 2025
J.D. Miles - KTVT

    DALLAS, Texas (KTVT) -- A Dallas County jury has rejected a Richardson mother's civil lawsuit against a convenience store that illegally sold alcohol to her teenage son moments before he died in a car wreck.

Now, that mother is focusing on getting a bill passed in the state legislature that would require all retailers that sell alcohol to use electronic ID readers.

Charlotte Stephens still holds on to every reminder of her son Deshawn, including a box containing the darkest reminder.

Empty bottles of alcohol were among what authorities found inside the wreckage of the 18-year-old's car in 2022.

Deshawn died, and his mother sued the Dallas convenience store for selling alcohol to a minor. The jury heard the case this week.

"Had he been carded, ID'd, I'd have my son today," Stephens said.

Stephens and her attorneys argued that laws that hold bartenders and servers accountable for a drunk driver's actions should also apply in Deshawn's case.

However, the jury disagreed because that law requires evidence that the customer is already intoxicated.

"You have to be visibly intoxicated to the clerk," Stephens said. "I'm very disappointed."

Now, Stephens is redirecting her efforts to prevent alcohol sales to minors by partnering with State Senator Royce West on a bill that would require all retailers to use electronic ID readers, which she believes would have prevented her son's death.

"It needs to be in all stores, and there has to be an implementation policy that makes the clerk scan the ID, just scan the ID. You scan ID when you go through TSA," Stephens said.

Stephens wants her son to be remembered not just for clutch shots that helped Woodrow Wilson's basketball team win games but also as someone whose tragic death at a young age will lead to needed change that protects others from the same fate.

"I think I'm saving my grandkids, and I'm saving yours," she said.

Share This

Popular

Americas|Crime|US

Ring camera captures the moment a small plane crashes into a home

Ring camera captures the moment a small plane crashes into a home
Americas|Crime|Health|Lifestyle

โ€˜What kind of piece of sh*t uses when pregnant?โ€™: Young mother speaks out on fentanyl addiction

โ€˜What kind of piece of sh*t uses when pregnant?โ€™: Young mother speaks out on fentanyl addiction
Business|Crime|Education|Political|US

Trump roars down multiple paths of retribution as he vowed. Some targets yield while others fight

Trump roars down multiple paths of retribution as he vowed. Some targets yield while others fight
Crime|Education|US

Elie Honig explains the law DHS is relying on to detain visa student

Elie Honig explains the law DHS is relying on to detain visa student

Crime

Crime|Europe|Political|World

Turkey arrests Swedish journalist over alleged terrorist connections to a pro-Kurdish group

Turkey arrests Swedish journalist over alleged terrorist connections to a pro-Kurdish group
Business|Crime|Education|Political|US

Trump is using the power of government to punish opponents. Theyโ€™re struggling to respond

Trump is using the power of government to punish opponents. Theyโ€™re struggling to respond
Crime|Political|US

At least half of US states now outlaw devices that convert pistols into machine guns

At least half of US states now outlaw devices that convert pistols into machine guns
Crime|Political|US

How a new Georgia bill could change the fate of domestic abuse survivors in prison

How a new Georgia bill could change the fate of domestic abuse survivors in prison