Laws related to name changes differ across the country. “It was almost comical,” she told the AP, which generally does not name people who allege sexual assault. “’That crossed the line,’” the woman remembers him saying after he pulled up his pants.
Though he immediately told her a relationship would be unethical, he eventually initiated sexual contact in February 2016, she said. In a recent interview with The Associated Press, the 61-year-old woman said she developed romantic feelings for Stone about six months after he began treating her for anxiety, depression and alcohol abuse in June 2013. Then, last July, he was charged with sexually assaulting a client who says he was anything but honest.
The Boston Globe called him “the most notorious drunk driver in New England history.”īut over time, he dedicated himself to helping people in addiction recovery, earning a master’s degree in counseling psychology from behind bars, and leading treatment programs for other inmates. Both Massachusetts and New Hampshire enacted new laws in response, and Dushame became the first person in New Hampshire to be convicted of manslaughter for a drunken driving fatality.
At age 22, he was acquitted of vehicular homicide after a crash that killed a 61-year-old woman.īecause he held a valid driver’s license despite five previous drunken driving convictions, the 1989 crash became a flash point. At age 17, he pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of a pedestrian crash after killing a former fellow student at his high school. It was his third fatal crash - though the first to involve alcohol. Lacey Packer, a fourth grader on her way home to Massachusetts from a Toys for Tots benefit with her father, died two days later. Everett Turnpike in Nashua, New Hampshire, on Oct. He was 33 years old, drunk and named Peter Dushame when he plowed his Pontiac into a motorcycle parked alongside the F.E.