A Piedmont wealth manager convicted of a deadly hit-and-run is fighting to get his driver’s license reinstated.
Attorneys for Timothy Hamano say the 68-year-old man has already served a mandatory three-year period without his driving privileges, and should be allowed to resume a normal life. But their request drew fervent resistance from family members of Gregory Turnage, the man Hamano struck and killed on Mother’s Day in 2021.
It’s the latest chapter in an unusually complicated case that’s produced two starkly different narratives. Hamano’s lawyers say their client’s life was upended by a tragic accident that he regrets every day. Turnage’s bereaved relatives, by contrast, see Hamano as an avatar of wealth and power, maneuvering through a justice system where money buys better outcomes. Losing his ability to drive was the only “real punishment” Hamano ever received, Turnage’s partner, Angie Brey, wrote in a searing July letter to the Alameda County court…