Mountain Brook man, 21, indicted in DUI crash on U.S. 280 that killed teen after leaving Zydeco
A Mountain Brook man has been indicted in the DUI traffic crash that killed one of his passengers on U.S. 280.
Gabriel Alexander “Gabe” Uncapher, 21, is charged with reckless manslaughter in the death of 19-year-old Virginia Elizabeth “Cricket” Davis.
A Jefferson County grand jury issued the indictment Dec. 7, 2023, and it was made public this week. Uncapher was initially arrested in September.
The indictment states that Uncapher was speeding and under the influence of alcohol and/or tetrahydracannibol – THC – when he crashed into a guardrail.
The wreck happened at 2:20 a.m. Sunday, June 18, on U.S. 280 at Hollywood Boulevard.
According to a civil suit filed against Uncapher, his father Dr. William Uncapher and Zydeco bar on Birmingham’s Southside, Uncapher and Davis attended a concert together there on Saturday, June 17. They left the bar in Sunday’s early morning hours.
With Gabe Uncapher behind the wheel of his 2000 Jeep Grand Cherokee, they crashed.
According to the civil suit, Uncapher lost control “due to his intoxicated condition and while operating a vehicle at an extremely high rate of speed, causing it to leave the roadway, strike a guardrail and violently roll over into some large trees.”
Davis, who was in the back seat, sustained blunt force injuries. She was pronounced dead on the scene at 2:23 a.m.
The deadly crash was investigated by Birmingham police.
Efforts to reach Zydeco for comment have been unsuccessful. The civil lawsuit, in part, says the bar was negligent in serving alcohol to minors.
Davis was a graduate of The Altamont School, where she was co-captain of the tennis team. According to her obituary, she received many awards in voice and acting, and sang a solo at graduation.
At the time of her death, she had just finished her freshman year at the University of Alabama where she was a member of Delta Zeta sorority.
Her mother, Lea Bone previously told AL.com she was disappointed that the charge was not murder.
Uncapher was seeking youthful offender status on the felony charge.
With the indictment issued, the case moves from a District Court judge to Circuit Court judge. Uncapher’s attorneys, Tommy Spina and Ben Preston, will have to reapply for that status before the new judge assigned to the case.
According to the Alabama’s Youthful Offender statute, if a person charged with a crime in an adult court in Alabama is under the age of 21 at the time of the alleged offense, that person has the right to make an application with the court requesting Youthful Offender status be granted.
Under the statute, a person deemed a youthful offender is tried before a judge and not jury and serves no more than three years if convicted of a felony, among other benefits. In misdemeanor cases, the maximum sentence is one year.