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Former professor pleads guilty in DUI crash that killed Golden police officer

Plea agreement guarantees prison time for Stephen Geer

Flowers, notes and items left on a police car remembering the life of Golden Police Officer Evan Dunn, Wednesday Nov. 13, 2024 in Golden. A service was held for Officer Dunn at Mission Hills Church. (Rebecca Slezak/Special to The Denver Post)
Flowers, notes and items left on a police car remembering the life of Golden Police Officer Evan Dunn, Wednesday Nov. 13, 2024 in Golden. A service was held for Officer Dunn at Mission Hills Church. (Rebecca Slezak/Special to The Denver Post)
Nick Coltrain - Staff portraits in The Denver Post studio on October 5, 2022. (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
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Golden Police Officer Evan Dunn was killed Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, after a suspected DUI driver crashed into another vehicle on Colorado 58 and trapped him and his partner under it. Dunn, 33, died at the scene and his partner was seriously injured. (Courtesy of Golden Police Department)
Golden Police Officer Evan Dunn was killed Wednesday, Nov. 6, 2024, after a suspected DUI driver crashed into another vehicle on Colorado 58 and trapped him and his partner under it. Dunn, 33, died at the scene and his partner was seriously injured. (Courtesy of Golden Police Department)

Stephen Geer pleaded guilty Monday to vehicular homicide while driving under the influence and vehicular assault for a drunk-driving crash last November that killed a Golden police officer and injured three other people, according to the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office.

Geer, 44, a former Colorado School of Mines professor, killed Officer Evan Dunn on Nov. 6 when he crashed into the back of a stopped car that Dunn was investigating as part of a separate crash on Colorado 58.

The crash also seriously injured Dunn’s partner, Bethany Grusing, and a father and daughter on the scene as part of the prior incident.

Geer is scheduled for sentencing Jan. 21.

The district attorney’s office, whose district includes Jefferson and Gilpin counties, dropped one other felony charge and two misdemeanor charges as part of the plea agreement.

But the agreement also stipulates that Geer serve between four and 18 years in the Department of Corrections — eliminating the possibility of parole if he had been convicted at trial, according to the district attorney’s office.

The agreement “reflects the parties’ acknowledgment that a prison sentence is the only appropriate outcome in this case,” according to the district attorney’s office.

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