Sentencing set for driver of infamous white Kia

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LAURA RUMINSKI/West Hawaii Today file photo William Duarte IV appears in May for a preliminary hearing in Kona District Court.
Courtesy photo Hawaii Police officer Jason Miyashiro was stopping for a cup of coffee at the Lako Street Shell gas station about 6:25 a.m. May 6 when he saw William “Willy Boy” Duarte IV enter the convenience store to purchase gas. He immediately took the 26-year-old and the heavily damaged white Kia Soul into custody, ending a four-plus-month saga that played out in social media group’s such as Big Island Popo Alert and Big Island Thieves on Facebook.
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KAILUA-KONA — Sentencing is scheduled in October for the driver of a white Kia Soul that gained notoriety on social media earlier this year for it’s driver’s “erratic and dangerous” actions.

William “Willy Boy” Duarte IV, 26, faces up to five years behind bars or one year imprisonment and four years probation for his actions behind the wheel in April and May, though the vehicle with heavy body damage began popping up on social media in January. Duarte is set to be sentenced Oct. 30 by Kona Circuit Judge Melvin Fujino.

In a plea deal with prosecutors, Duarte pleaded guilty Aug. 8 to four of the 10 charges filed against him in May in connection with incidents that unfolded April 21, May 4 and May 6, when Duarte was taken into police custody.

In exchange for pleading guilty to misdemeanor offenses of driving without a license, leaving the scene of an accident involving damage to vehicle or property and second-degree reckless endangering, and first-degree resisting an order to stop, a Class C felony, the state agreed to drop six charges. Those charges comprised two Class C felonies, one misdemeanor, three petty misdemeanors and two traffic infractions.

Prosecutors also agreed to recommend concurrent sentencing in the case, as well as with two other cases. The deal also notes prosecutor’s intent to recommend a prison sentence.

Duarte pleaded not guilty in May to three counts of first-degree resisting an order to stop, three counts of reckless driving, two counts of driving without a license (after having two or more prior convictions within the past five years), two counts of fraudulent use of plates and one count each of second-degree reckless endangering and leaving the scene of an accident involving damage to vehicle or property.

He’s been detained at Hawaii Community Correctional Center since his arrest in lieu of $34,775 bail. Trial was set to open today.

Duarte was taken into police custody May 6 when a Hawaii Police Department officer grabbing a cup of coffee saw him at the Lako Street Shell gas station in Kailua-Kona.

The white Kia Soul with heavy body damage Duarte was reportedly driving gained notoriety starting in January as residents posted about the subcompact SUV on social media. Dozens of posts on Big Island Popo Alert and Big Island Thieves garnered hundreds of comments about the vehicle, its driver and their location. Police were also following the postings.

The charges filed against Duarte stem from incidents that unfolded after officers attempted unsuccessfully to stop the vehicle and its driver for traffic violations on April 21 near Lako Street and twice on May 4 in Kailua Village. No officers were injured in the incidents; however, police say Duarte unintentionally struck a subsidized police vehicle as he fled.

Email Chelsea Jensen at cjensen@westhawaiitoday.com.