Crime & Safety

Judge Orders Sean Ludwick Held Without Bail After Sag Harbor Crash that Killed Passenger: DA

The judge said he was not confident any amount of bail would guarantee the defendant's return to court, District Attorney Thomas Spota said.

Sean Ludwick, the New York City real estate developer who allegedly drove drunk and left his passenger on the road in Sag Harbor to die after an accident last summer, will await trial behind bars on a 13-count indictment,, Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota said.

Justice Fernando Camacho ordered Ludwick held without bail today; the defendant is incarcerated in the Suffolk County Correctional Facility, Spota said.

Justice Camacho remarked that after listening to the defense attorney, Benjamin Brafman, and the Chief of the Vehicular Crimes Bureau of the Suffolk County District Attorney’s office, John Scott Prudenti, he was ”not confident that any amount of bail would guarantee the defendant’s return to court,” Spota said.

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Aninvestigation found that Ludwick performed internet searches, and accessed news stories with information of interest to a person contemplating the life of a fugitive, Spota said.

Examples of the stories include: “Five Countries with no U.S. Extradition Treaty,” “Panama —United States Relations,” “Are The High Seas A Criminal Paradise?”

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According to Spota, Ludwick,was returned to Suffolk County last week by United States Marshals Service and other federal authorities in response to a bench warrant issued by State Supreme Court Justice Camacho.

He was arrested last Tuesday night at his home on Brick Kiln Road in Sag Harbor by Southampton Town Police, Spota said.

Ludwick, while in Puerto Rico, allegedly made inquiries about purchasing a boat large enough to travel to South America, and also had allegedly made or was trying to make arrangements to take sailing lessons, Spota said.

Ludwick pleaded not guilty to the13-count indictment with charges including aggravated vehicular homicide at his arraignment earlier this month, according to the DA.

State Supreme Court Justice Camacho explained before remanding Ludwick to jail that the court had been notified of Ludwick’s activity in Puerto Rico by employees of the island hotel where he was a guest, and that the information prompted the immediate issuance of a bench warrant to compel Ludwick to return to court as soon as possible.

Ludwick allegedly crashed his 2013 Porsche into a utility pole in Sag Harbor last August, fatally injuring his passenger Paul Hansen, 53, the DA said. An investigation by the Vehicular Crimes Bureau established that Ludwick allegedly removed the victim’s body from his sports car and then tried to drive away from the scene, Spota said.

The heavily damaged Porsche and Ludwick, who police said was intoxicated, were found about a quarter mile away, the DA said.

Spota, in announcing the indictment, said Ludwick’s blood had a blood-alcohol content of .18 percent four hours after the fatal crash.

The indictment charges him with aggravated vehicular homicide, vehicular manslaughter, manslaughter, driving while intoxicated, aggravated driving while intoxicated, leaving the scene, reckless driving, speeding, failure to stay in a single lane and driving on the shoulder or slope of the roadway, Spota said.

The top charge of aggravated vehicular homicide is punishable by a sentence in state prison of eight and one-third to 25 years, DA Spota said. Leaving the scene of a fatal crash is punishable by a maximum of two and one-third to seven years in an upstate correctional facility.

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