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Inset: Danielle Bowker (Ocean County Corrections). Background: The intersection where Bowker caused a fatal crash in Manchester Township, N.J. (Google Maps).
This week, prosecutors in New Jersey revealed that a local woman avoided prison time despite being involved in a highway accident that resulted in the deaths of two individuals.
Danielle M. Bowker, aged 34, was found guilty of two counts of third-degree vehicular manslaughter by an Ocean County jury in October 2025. The charges stemmed from a March 2022 incident that tragically ended the lives of 48-year-old Michael Sadis and 58-year-old Paul Lamberti.
On Friday, Superior Court Judge Dina M. Vicari handed Bowker a sentence of five years probation, along with a two-year suspension of her driving privileges—a sentence considerably lighter than what the prosecutors had sought.
Prosecutors had pushed for Bowker to serve three years in prison for each of the victims, with the sentences to be served consecutively. This information was detailed in a press release from the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office.
The tragic crash took place in Manchester Township on the morning of March 29, 2022. Around 7:15 a.m., officers from the Manchester Township Police Department responded to an accident site on Route 571, located approximately 30 miles southeast of Trenton.
Upon arrival, officers discovered a five-car collision with at least one confirmed fatality. Investigations revealed that Bowker’s 2018 Honda Civic collided with a New Jersey Department of Transportation Ford F-550 pickup truck traveling in the opposite direction.
Somewhat miraculously, the head-on collision did not kill either driver directly involved – or the passenger in the pickup truck.
But the same could not be said for two other drivers caught in the fray.
“As a consequence, the Ford F-550 lost directional control and struck a 2012 Toyota Camry operated by Mr. Sadis, pushing the Camry off the roadway into an embankment,” the press release explains. “The Ford F-550 continued in the same direction of travel and struck a 2015 Toyota Corolla operated by Mr. Lamberti.”
Sadis was pronounced dead at the scene while Lamberti was airlifted to Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune where he eventually succumbed to his injuries, prosecutors said.
In June 2022, Bowker was charged with two counts each of vehicular homicide, assault by auto, strict liability vehicular homicide, and driving while intoxicated, prosecutors noted. She was formally indicted by a grand jury in February 2023.
When Bowker was charged, prosecutors alleged the defendant was a “recent, active user of marijuana” at the time of the crash, based on lab results showing THC in her system, according to Patch.com.
“Upon reviewing the laboratory results of Bowker’s blood draw, the state’s psychopharmacologist rendered an opinion that at the time of the crash, Bowker’s faculties were impaired due to the effects of marijuana intoxication, and that she could not safely operate a motor vehicle,” Ocean County Prosecutor Bradley D. Billhimer said then.
During her trial, Bowker admitted to smoking marijuana the night before the incident. A defense expert also explained that the effects of such marijuana use would have worn off long before the time she awoke and drove the next morning.
Jurors ultimately rejected the marijuana-related charges.
While reading the verdicts aloud, the jury forewoman said Bowker’s recklessness was merely the result of failure to maintain a lane, according to a courtroom report by the Asbury Park Press.
“Reckless driving is not a mistake – it is a dangerous choice that costs lives. This jury’s verdict makes clear that we will hold drivers accountable when they put other lives at risk. Let this verdict serve as a cautionary tale: if you drive recklessly and take a life, you will face the consequences,” Billhimer said in a statement after the verdict. “While nothing can bring their loved ones back, we hope today’s verdict provides some measure of justice and closure for the loved ones of Michael Sadis and Paul Lamberti.”