Community Corner

Owner of Santa Cruz Party Bus Company Charged with Manslaughter in 2012 Case

 Bay City News

The owner of a Santa Cruz bus company was arrested today on  manslaughter charges in the death of a woman who fell out of a party bus onto  state Highway 17 near Los Gatos last July, according to the Santa Clara  County District Attorney's Office.

Jon Reno St. James, 56, was arrested by the California Highway  Patrol at his residence in San Bernardino County after he was indicted on  vehicular and voluntary manslaughter charges by a grand jury in San Jose,  Supervising District Attorney Brian Welch said.  

The Santa Clara County grand jury handed down the indictment on  May 3 after listening to a case presented by Deputy District Attorney Matt  Braker, Welsh said.   

Following the secret proceedings, a Superior Court judge issued a  bench warrant for St. James, owner of Party Bus of Santa Cruz, and set his  bail at $100,000, Welch said.

The CHP officers took St. James into custody at his home in the  unincorporated town of Yucca Valley and booked him into the San Bernardino  Central Jail in San Bernardino, Welsh said.  
 
On July 27, 2012, 25-year-old Natasha Noland was killed when she  fell out of St. James' limousine-style "party bus" vehicle onto Highway 17  near state Highway 9 during a fight with a 20-year-old woman shortly before  midnight.   

The vehicle, holding about a dozen people, was returning to Santa  Cruz from a Brad Paisley concert at the Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View when Noland and the other woman got into a fight and the side door  opened, spilling them onto the highway.  

Noland died but the other passenger survived. 
 
The grand jury concluded that St. James was grossly negligent in  maintaining the vehicle to ensure the safety of passengers, said Welch, who  supervises the district attorney's homicide team.   The Superior Court judge who issued bench warrant will soon set a  date for St. James to be arraigned on the charges in San Jose, Welch said.
     
St. James faces a sentence of up to six years in prison if he is  convicted, according to the district attorney's office.     



Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here