Driver Gets 13 Years in Prison for DUI Crash That Killed Colorado Police Officer

Stephen Geer pleaded guilty in October to vehicular homicide and assault for the drunken-driving crash that killed Golden Police Officer Evan Dunn in November 2024.
Jan. 23, 2026
2 min read

What to Know

  • Stephen Geer pleaded guilty to vehicular homicide and assault related to a fatal crash in Golden, Colorado.
  • The crash resulted in the death of Officer Evan Dunn and injuries to three others, including Geer’s arrest at the scene.
  • Geer was intoxicated, with a blood alcohol level more than twice the legal limit, at the time of the crash.

GOLDEN, Colorado -- A former Colorado School of Mines professor was sentenced to 13 years in prison on Wednesday for causing a crash that killed Golden police officer Evan Dunn and injured three others.

Stephen Geer, 44, pleaded guilty in October to vehicular homicide and assault for the drunken-driving crash on Colorado 58 the evening of Nov. 6, 2024, according to court records. Both counts are felonies.

Prosecutors dismissed one count of vehicular assault, third-degree assault and driving under the influence as part of the plea agreement. 

Dunn, 33, and his partner Bethany Peterson – who previously went by Bethany Grusing – were responding to a crash on Colorado 58 near Washington Avenue at 5 p.m. when Geer hit them, trapping both under the vehicle from the initial crash.

Peterson, along with a father and daughter involved in the initial crash, were all seriously injured. Dunn died at the scene.

Geer smelled of alcohol when he was arrested after the crash and had a blood alcohol more than twice the legal limit when he was tested three hours later, according to Denver7.

At a sentencing hearing on Wednesday, Dunn’s family asked for the maximum sentence in the case as they described their loss, Denver7 reported.

“I just don’t have words that can fully and fairly capture how deep that loss is. It’s real, it’s forever, it hurts. It’s the greatest I’ve known,” Dunn’s brother Tyler Dunn said at the sentencing. “The collective pain caused by this tragedy is immeasurable.”

Geer apologized during the sentencing hearing and said he did not expect forgiveness but hoped his incarceration would provide closure, the station reported.

©2026 MediaNews Group, Inc. Visit at denverpost.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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