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911 Call Released in Deadly Car Crash Involving Colo. State Sen.

911 Call Released in Deadly Car Crash Involving Colo. State Sen.

"I want my mommy! What happened to my mommy?"

(The Daily Mail) -- The distraught screams of two children whose pregnant mother was killed in a crash with a senator’s car can be heard in a distressing 911 call released today.

The chilling call was made on December 26 after a car being driven by Colorado senator Suzanne Williams crossed into the wrong lane killing 30-year-old Brianna Gomez on a bridge near Channing, Texas.

As witnesses call for help, the screams of Mrs Gomez’s daughters Mali Gomez, 6, and Eleri, 2, can be heard in the background.

'I want my mommy! What happened to my mommy?’ the children are heard repeatedly crying.

According to police, Mrs Williams’ SUV drove into oncoming traffic and crashed head on with a car being driven by Mrs Gomez’s husband Eric.

Mrs Gomez died in surgery after her unborn child, Curran, was delivered by Caesarean section.

'The gentleman says his wife is in the car and he think she didn’t make it,’ the 911 caller told police in the released emergency call.

'The two little kids are just crying and screaming, so I’m going to go and comfort them,’ she said.

Police recommended that Mrs Williams be charged with criminally negligent homicide, four counts of injury to a child and tampering with physical evidence after the crash.

But in May a grand jury decided not to indict Mrs Williams, who was cited with misdemeanour violations.

According to police documents, Mrs Williams drove 783 miles from Aurora to McKinney, Texas, on Christmas Day to visit her son’s family and had slept for less than six hours before setting off for Colorado the next day.

Her son Todd drove from McKinney to Amarillo as Mrs Williams slept and watched a film with her two grandchildren in the back of the car, before she took over the driving.

The crash happened on a bridge in the Texas Panhandle after Mrs Williams drove into the wrong lane.

'It is the opinion of the reconstruction team that Mrs Williams may have been fatigued while driving," the report said.

She may have also been distracted 'and not paying attention to her driving’ because she was listening to her son read a book to his children, the report said.

Mrs Williams was accused of moving one of her grandchildren from the side of the road and later not being forthcoming if asked if he had been thrown out of the car.

Williams’ attorney denied any wrongdoing. He said: 'That is obscene that they would say she was tampering with evidence and completely out of touch with humanity.’

Listen to the 911 call here.

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