
It was supposed to be a simple grand jury hearing, a chance for the truth to emerge.
But it never emerged.
On April 12, 2025, mere days after the legal fate of Kyren Lacy might well have been decided, he committed suicide.
And now, in the wake of that tragedy, new evidence and a district attorney report are fueling a hot agenda: that he was never guilty of the December crash he was accused of.

Dec. 17, 2024, saw Herman Hall, 78, killed in a Lafourche Parish crash.
Louisiana State Police alleged that Lacy passed a number of cars in a no-pass area and caused a chain reaction by driving erratically, then left the scene without help after the accident.
He turned himself in weeks later and bonded out on charges of felony hit-and-run, negligent homicide, and reckless driving for $151,000.
But throughout the following months, Lacy’s admirers insisted that the public had already given their verdict long before he had a chance to present his case.
And now, just weeks after he passed away, Lacy’s attorney, Matt Ory, is pushing back in a big way.
He’s released surveillance footage that he claims confirms Lacy’s car was over 70 yards behind the wreck when it happened.
And sure enough, the video—at least according to him—shows Lacy driving up some four seconds after the crash.
The district attorney’s internal report, previously unpublished, is also quoted by Ory as determining that the evidence presented is inadequate to show that Lacy was responsible for the crash.
Red flags continued to be highlighted by the defense:
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Inconsistent or contradictory witness accounts
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Lack of responsiveness from investigators in interviewing critical witnesses (including one passenger in Lacy’s car)
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What Ory has described as a “witch hunt” approach from the beginning, fueled by media and public bias
In her own words: “There was never a presumption of innocence … we were crushed under the weight of an irresponsible and prejudiced process.”
It’s messy. It’s tragic. And it’s painfully incomplete.
Because Lacy died before the grand jury had a chance to even review his case, he never received an official ruling of innocence.
Nevertheless, in the court of public opinion, much of the tale was already told before new evidence had a chance to emerge.
During the final days of his life, he was preparing to face a jury panel.
His attorney believed beyond any doubt that the case would be rejected once thoroughly scrutinized.
Today, the defense is calling for accountability and transparency in how investigations are handled, and for all remaining questions to be posed.
If the DA report and video hold up to scrutiny, the public debate could shift fundamentally.
Investigatory agencies may be made to justify their initial findings and determinations.
But nothing will ever fully erase Lacy’s loss—or the damage resulting from early conclusions made before the complete case had even been assembled.
Because in the end, the tragedy isn’t whether he was guilty or not.
It’s how much stress a young man was put under when the whole world assumed the worst long before there was ever evidence.
<Student Reporter Andrew Choi > Canyon Crest Academy andrewchoi0724@gmail.com



