
Personal Information
Jayda Wielzen was booked in McMinn County on Sep 4, 2025 on 1 felony, 5 misdemeanors, including Vehicular Homicide and 5 other charges.
Charges (6)
Vehicular Homicide
Original: VEHICULAR HOMICIDE (Felony)
Vehicular homicide is recklessly killing someone through operation of a vehicle (car, airplane, boat, or other motor vehicle) when caused by conduct creating substantial risk of death, the driver's intoxication, drag racing, or construction zone violations. Punishment ranges from 2 to 12 years in prison and up to $5,000 in fines for reckless conduct or drag racing; intoxication-related vehicular homicide is punished more severely as a Class B felony with a mandatory minimum 48 hours in jail, and sentences are enhanced for prior alcohol-related convictions.
Penalty: Class D felony; 2-12 years; fine up to $5,000
Sentence: MUST HAVE ALCOHOL MONITOR BEFORE BONDING BOUND OVER
Driving on Suspended/revoked License
Original: DRIVING ON REVOKED DL (Misdemeanor)
Driving while license cancelled, suspended or revoked – Minors – Forfeiture – Notice — Class B misdemeanor. Up to 6 months in jail and $500 fine. Penalty may be enhanced for prior offenses or aggravating factors.
Penalty: Class B misdemeanor; 6 months; fine up to $500
Sentence: BOUND OVER
Driving on Roadways Laned for Traffic
Original: FAILURE TO MAINTAIN LANE (Misdemeanor)
Driving on roadways laned for traffic.
Penalty: Classification not specified
View full statute explanationSentence: BOUND OVER
DUI
Original: DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE (Misdemeanor)
Driving under the influence prohibited – Alcohol concentration in blood or breath.
Penalty: Classification not specified
View full statute explanationSentence: BOUND OVER
Reckless Endangerment
Original: RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT - CLASS A MISDEMEANOR (Misdemeanor)
Reckless endangerment is when someone acts recklessly in a way that puts another person in immediate danger of death or serious injury. This happens when a person is aware of a serious risk but ignores it anyway—for example, firing a gun into a crowd or driving dangerously fast through a populated area. A basic conviction is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 11 months and 29 days in jail and/or a fine up to $2,500. The offense is enhanced to a Class E, D, or C felony (1-15 years in prison) if the reckless conduct involves using a deadly weapon or firearm.
Penalty: Class A misdemeanor; 11 months 29 days; fine up to $2,500
Sentence: NO BILL
Nonsupport and Flagrant Nonsupport
Original: CHILD SUPPORT (Misdemeanor)
It is illegal for a parent or spouse to fail to provide financial support, food, shelter, clothing, or medical care to a minor child or disabled spouse when the person is able to do so and knows they have a legal duty—this is nonsupport, a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 11 months 29 days in jail and a $2,500 fine. Nonsupport becomes the more serious crime of "flagrant nonsupport" (a Class E felony punishable by 1–6 years in prison) if the person leaves the state to avoid support obligations or has been convicted of nonsupport before.
Penalty: Class A misdemeanor; 11 months 29 days; fine up to $2,500
Sentence: PAY OR STAY 180 DAYS
Booking Details
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