‘Laughed when talking about his deceased roommate’: Remorseless mushroom-eating driver killed 2 in car crash, including veterans service worker, prosecutors say

Background, left to right: Fullington William Frazer III, the site of the crash that killed two people (Clackamas County Prosecutor

Background, left to right: Fullington William Frazer III, the site of the crash that killed two people (Clackamas County Prosecutor’s Office). Insets, top to bottom: Mitchell Scott Barr, Fleetwood Mars Mozee (GoFundMe).

A man accused of killing two men Oregon, including his roommate, in a three-vehicle crash while high on psychedelic mushrooms allegedly showed “no remorse” for his actions, prosecutors say.

Fullington William Frazer III, 23, was convicted of manslaughter and other charges on Thursday, the Clackamas County district attorney’s office announced.

“Frazer, in jail calls days after the crash, appeared to show no remorse and laughed when talking about his deceased roommate,” prosecutors said in the statement.

A judge will decide Frazer’s sentence on May 2 for killing his roommate, Mitchell Scott Barr, 24, and another driver, Fleetwood Mars Mozee, 37.

According to prosecutors, Frazer gave Barr a ride to a grocery store in the city of Milwaukie on the night of Dec. 30, 2023. But the defendant — who was on probation for a 2021 public indecency conviction and had also been involved in a different 2023 high-speed crash in Portland — was high on psilocybin mushrooms at the time.

Authorities said he sped through a red light at about 60 miles per hour at the intersection of Southeast Freeman Way and Highway 224. In doing so, he crashed into a Prius, injuring the driver and passenger, and then struck Mozee’s Subaru.

“Barr was ejected from Frazer’s car,” prosecutors wrote.

According to the prosecution, a state trooper said that it was “one of the most destructive crashes he’d ever seen.”

Frazer “was going pedal to the metal,” Clackamas County Deputy District Attorney Chelsea Jones told the court, saying Frazer sped up his Dodge Caliber to almost 60 miles an hour as he approached the intersection.

“I just want the love,” he said when asked if he needed medical attention, according to prosecutors.

A trooper interviewed him at the hospital. He claimed he did not remember having a passenger, and when told two people died, he asked, “Are they okay?”

Prosecutors noted that Mozee worked for Multnomah County as a veterans service specialist, helping veterans get benefits, and had a bumper sticker on his car that read “Do It Sober.”

In addition to being convicted of two manslaughter charges, Frazer was also found guilty of DUI, reckless driving, reckless endangerment, and assault.

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