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After five weeks of testimony and deliberation, a Fresno jury has found Greyhound not negligent in a deadly crash in 2010. Six people were killed.<br /><br />Sylvia Garay, Stephanie Cordoba and Vanessa Gonzalez were in an overturned S-U-V that was struck by the bus on Highway 99.<br /><br />Their families said the women were killed in part because of mistakes made by the Greyhound bus driver.<br /><br />The families of Sylvia Garay, Vanessa Gonzales, and Stephanie Cordoba left the courtroom after the jury’s decision… which did not go in their favor.<br />An attorney for the Garay family said it was a case of David versus Goliath.<br /><br />"Here we have a working class family in Dinuba and they’re taking on a multi-billion dollar corporation. And they had the courage to stand in court and do it," said attorney Jason Helsel.<br /><br />The families of the three women sued Greyhound for negligence, contending the bus driver was speeding and the bus’s brakes were not properly maintained the morning of July 22ND, 2010.<br /><br />The three women had been out celebrating a friends birthday when Garay’s SUV overturned on Highway 99 at McKinley. <br /><br />The bus struck the SUV, then a tree, killing the bus driver, two passengers, and the three women.<br />An attorney for greyhound praised the work of the jury.<br /><br />"There are no winners in a case like this. Six people lost their lives. Including the Greyhound driver. No one walks out of here celebrating or happy that we even had to be here," said attorney Dana Fox, who represented Greyhound.<br /><br />The CHP conducted the investigation into the accident and determined that 18-year-old Sylvia Garay was responsible for the accident. And that she was drunk behind the wheel when her SUV overturned.<br />Attorney and legal analyst Charles Magill says the jury seemed to rely heavily on the findings of the CHP. <br />Magill says the CHP was conducting the investigation while they were being sued by Greyhound, which alleged the CHP was slow to respond to the crash.<br /><br />"I think it put pressure on law enforcement to be less than objective, which is what we would expect from a CHP investigation," Magill said.<br /><br />The families were asking for millions from Greyhound. They could appeal the jury’s decision.<br /></div>
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