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Teen Driver to Serve 30 Days in Bicyclist’s Death

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Times Staff Writer

The teen-age driver who admitted responsibility in the death of a 14-year-old bicyclist was given a 30-day jail sentence and ordered to perform 200 hours of community service by a Juvenile Court judge Friday.

Pejman B. Alaghamandan, 17, who pleaded guilty to misdemeanor manslaughter, also had his driver’s license suspended for a year and was ordered to pay restitution--the amount not yet specified--to the victim’s family.

Alaghamandan was driving a Volkswagen full of teen-agers in Irvine on Sept. 20, 1988, when the car struck David Leidal, an honors student on his way to classes at University High School. Leidal was in a crosswalk at a four-way stop at Michelson Drive and Yale Avenue. Witnesses told police that Alaghamandan ran the stop sign.

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Immediately after Leidal’s death, his family asked doctors to give one of his kidneys to Jeff Bergan, a 26-year-old freshman football and wrestling coach at Mission Viejo High School, who was hospitalized, suffering from kidney failure and a weak heart. The transplant was successful. Leidal was playing lineman as a freshman for University High at the time he was killed.

In a closed hearing, Judge C. Robert Jameson ordered Alaghamandan to spend 90 days in jail but suspended 60 days of it on the condition that he obey all laws during a year of formal probation, during which he must report regularly to a probation officer.

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