The trooper and his wife, Greg and Carrie Taylor, filed the suit under a law that makes businesses that serve and sell alcohol liable for injuries caused when someone underage is served or an adult is overserved.
Click here to read the lawsuit.
The statute of limitation on the “Dram Shop” law is one year, and the Taylor’s suit was filed two days before that limit was up.
Their son Johnathan was 18 and had just graduated from Ravenscroft High School when his car slammed into a tree on Hunting Ridge Road near his North Raleigh home on June 28, 2014.
The teen was returning from a wedding party at the home of a prominent Raleigh physician, Charles Matthews.
Matthews and his wife, Kim, will be tried later this month on criminal charges of aiding and abetting underage drinking.
According to the Taylors’ lawsuit, their son, along with the Matthews’ teenage son, went to the ABC store at Cameron Village before the wedding.
The Wake County ABC Board, which operates the store, is also named in the suit because the Taylors claim a clerk there sold a fifth of liquor to the Matthews’ son without checking his ID to learn he was underage.
The lawsuit alleges that the two boys and three other friends drank the fifth of liquor in ten minutes before attending the 7:30 p.m. wedding
It also alleges that after the wedding of Kim Matthews’ daughter at the Matthews’ multi-million dollar, inside the beltline home, there was a reception at which Johnathan Taylor and other teens were served alcohol by Parizade ….MORE