Orange County

7 more people, including 2 UNC football players, charged in fatal Chapel Hill crash

Seven additional people, including employees from at least one Chapel Hill bar and two members of the UNC-Chapel Hill football team, have been charged in connection to a fatal crash in January that killed a UNC-Chapel Hill student and left two others injured.

Police have said that alcohol was a factor in the crash and all of the additional charges announced Friday are related to underage drinking.

The UNC-Chapel Hill student who was driving the car involved in the crash near Meadowmont in the early morning hours of Sunday, Jan. 21, was arrested and charged Feb. 14. She faces a dozen criminal charges, including driving while impaired, felony death by vehicle and involuntary manslaughter.

A third student and possible member of the UNC football team has also been charged, police announced Wednesday.

Flemeeja Beatrice Brewer, 20, was driving east on N.C. 54 near East Barbee Chapel Road when she lost control and drove into a wooded area, according to police. They said Brewer was speeding and under the influence of alcohol when the crash took place about 2:23 a.m.

A passenger, Mary Elizabeth Rotunda, 20, was killed. Brewer and another passenger, 21-year-old Brianna Tiera Pinson, were treated for injuries that were not life threatening, police said.

All three women were from Greensboro. Rotunda was a student at UNC-Chapel Hill. Pinson was not a UNC student, according to the university.

Investigators estimate Brewer was going more than 120 mph before she ran off the right side of the road and hit a street sign just past the Barbee Chapel Road intersection, according to a crash report. The car then hit several small trees and started to roll before coming to rest on its roof in the grass between N.C. 54 and Stancill Drive, the report says.

The speed limit on that stretch of N.C. 54 is 45 mph.

The original charges were announced by the Chapel Hill police. Friday’s charges were announced by the North Carolina Alcohol Law Enforcement division, which is continuing to investigate the circumstances surrounding the crash.

Brewer was not old enough to legally buy alcohol, and several of the charges she faces are related to drinking and driving as an underage person, including using a fraudulent ID to buy alcohol. Pinson, who was old enough to buy alcohol, has been charged with helping someone under 21 consume alcohol.

Brewer was released after posting a $75,000 bond and is scheduled to make her first appearance in court on Feb. 19.

Underage drinking charges

During their investigation, police decided to charge the driver of another vehicle. Zachary O’Brien Rice, 20, of Lynchburg, Virginia, was charged with speeding, consuming alcohol while underage and driving after drinking while underage.

Police spokesman Alex Carrasquillo declined to say how the two vehicles were related or how officers investigating the fatal crash decided to charge Rice. No other vehicles are mentioned in the crash report. Rice’s birthday was Jan. 21, the day of the early-morning crash.

The university confirmed Rice and Brewer also are students at UNC-Chapel Hill.

Malaki Hamrick and Travis Shaw, both 19, who were among those charged Friday, are members of UNC’s football team, as is Rice.

Hamrick is charged with underage possession/consumption of alcohol. Shaw is facing charges of underage possession/consumption of alcohol and five counts of aiding/abetting underage possession/consumption of alcohol in connection with the crash. He was also charged on an outstanding order for arrest for failing to appear in Durham County for possession of marijuana, underage possession of alcoholic beverages and unauthorized possession.

UNC athletic director Bubba Cunningham, responding to a question about the three football players and whether they would face team discipline, said: “We will not address it publicly, but we will take action.”

ALE said it had found that Brewer and Rotunda, the underage passengers of the car involved in the crash, had been served alcohol at Still Life, 159 E. Franklin St., and at Might as Well, 206 W. Franklin St.

Still Life employees Karissa Webb, 22, and Annelle McNair, 24, were charged with selling/giving alcohol to underage people.

The others charged Friday are:

  • Cameren Spencer, 20, was charged with underage possession/consumption of alcohol and two counts of giving malt beverages or unfortified wine to anyone less than 21 years old.
  • Caden Spender, 22, was charged with six counts of aiding/abetting underage possession/consumption of alcohol.

ALE said it will file a report with the ABC Commission when it completes its investigation. The commission may then sanction Still Life and Might as Well with a fine, suspension, or revocation of their ABC permits.

News & Observer sports columnist Luke DeCock contributed to this story.

This story was originally published February 14, 2024 at 3:56 PM.

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Richard Stradling
The News & Observer
Richard Stradling covers transportation for The News & Observer. Planes, trains and automobiles, plus ferries, bicycles, scooters and just plain walking. He’s been a reporter or editor for 38 years, including the last 26 at The N&O. 919-829-4739, rstradling@newsobserver.com.
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