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Brady Francis was likely standing when struck, pathologist tells hit-and-run trial

Brady Francis suffered blunt force trauma to his skull, hisliver was lacerated, his left lung showed signs of trauma and multiple abrasions coveredmost of his body, the pathologist who conducted the autopsy testified Tuesday at the hit-and-run trial of Maurice Johnson.

Accused Maurice Johnson told police in videotaped statement he didn't drink or do drugs the night of collision

Brady Francis was 22 when he was struck and killed in February of 2018 while waiting for a drive on Saint-Charles South Road. (Brady Francis/Facebook)

Brady Francis suffered blunt force trauma to his skull, hisliver was lacerated, his left lung showed signs of trauma and multiple abrasions coveredmost of his body, the pathologist who conducted the autopsy testified Tuesday at the hit-and-run trial of Maurice Johnson.

"In my opinion, he died of blunt force trauma to the head and neck" consistent with a motor vehicle collision, Dr. Ken Obenson told the Moncton Court of Queen's Bench.

The body of Francis, 22, ofElsipogtog First Nation, was found on Saint-Charles South Road in Saint-Charles on Feb. 24, 2018, at around 9:40 p.m.

Johnson, 57, of Saint-Charles has pleaded not guilty to failing to stop at the scene of an accident that caused a person's death.

Obenson, who performed the autopsy at the Saint John Regional Hospitalon Feb. 25, 2018, testified he believes Francis was standing at the moment of impact and may have been projected onto the vehicle that struck him.

Hewasunable to determine if Francis was struckhead-on, from the side, or from behind, he said.

Francis was intoxicated at the time, with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.29,Obensonfound about three-and-a-half times the legal limit.

Earlier in the trial, the court heard Francis had been at a diaper partyfor a friend who was expecting a baby.

Pathologist Dr. Ken Obenson conducted the autopsy the day after Brady Francis's body was found. (PIerre Fournier/CBC)

Hewas seen afterward walking along the road and had called his parents to ask for a ride home. By the time they arrived minutes later, they found theirson's bodylying face-up on the side of the road.

The trial is scheduled to continue on Wednesday morning, when the Crown is expected to call its final witnesses.

The defence plans to call four witnesses. It's not yet clear whether Johnson will testifyin his own defence.

Wife drank 8 beers in truck

The court has watchedthe videotaped statement Johnson gave to RCMP on March 15, 2018, following his arrest. In the roughly four-hour video, Johnson told police he was drinking Diet Pepsi the night Francis was killed, and didn't consume any alcohol or drugs.

Johnson said his wife drank eight beers while they drove around in his pickup truck between around 3:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., tossing the empties along the way, but he was behind the wheelwhen struck what he initially thought was a deer.

Cpl.Nicholas Potvinalleged Johnson "got scared" the night of the collision and urged him to "own up."

"This is your chance to correct the mistake you made by telling the truth," Potvin said in French.

Maurice Johnson, 57, of Saint-Charles, is charged with failing to stop at the scene of an accident that caused a person's death. (Pierre Fournier/CBC)

The officer noted other people reported seeing Francis walking along the road that night and questioned why Johnson did not. He suggested something was affecting his judgment.

Johnson repeatedly told the officer he wasn't drinking that day. Although he drank when he was younger, he drinks "almost never now," he said in French.

His wife sometimes drinks a bottle of wine on the weekends. "Me? I stay at home and watch Netflix and drink my coffee."

The last time he drank was about three weeks before the accident, when he bought a case of 12 beers, he said. "I don't do drugs," he added.

'Do the right thing'

During the first part of the interview, played for the courton Monday, Johnson saidhe and his wife were talking during their leisure drive andhe turned his head to look at her for a moment. When he turned back, there was a deer in front of his truck and he didn't have time to brake, he said.

He stopped and looked back, but didn't see anything, so he thought the animal had run off and they kept going, he said."If I thought it had been a person, I would have stopped."

As the interview continued, Potvinquestioned whether Johnson would have been scaredif he had stopped and had police arrived. "Would they have found anything in your vehicle?"

Johnson said he wouldn't have been scared, and asked the officer about speaking to his lawyer.

RCMP Cpl. Nicholas Potvin interviewed Maurice Johnson at the Richibucto detachment on March 15, 2018, about three weeks after Brady Francis was killed. (Pierre Fournier/CBC)

Potvintold Johnson he had already spoken to hislawyer and that he was not obliged to answer any more questions. But hesaid Johnson was the only one who could "complete the puzzle of what really happened that night" and he pressedhim to "do the right thing."

"You're a good person, Maurice, a hard worker, a family man, a father, a husband," he said. "Give closure to the [Francis] family."

"I saw what I saw," replied Johnson. "I did not see a person."

Potvin also grilled the accused about being unsure where the collision occurred.

Johnsontold a friend it was on Gray Road, while he told an officer the day Francis's body was discovered that it was on Saint-Charles North Road, andPotvinthat it was on Saint-Charles South Road.

Johnson said he knew he turned off Gray Road and went left and left again and that it was on one of those roads, but he wasn't sure exactly where because "it was just a deer."

Francis's body was found 1.8 kilometresfrom Johnson's house, the courtroom heard.

Johnson told police he drove home, watched TV and went to bed around 11 p.m.

Potvin asked if he noticed the police cars that drove past his house after Francis's body was discovered. Johnsonsaid he did not.

The trial began last week and has heard from 32 witnesses so far. It is scheduled to continue until Jan. 31.

Justice Denise LeBlanc is presiding.

With files from Maeve McFadden