More than nine months after 14-year-old Gavin Knupp was fatally struck on a road outside of Ocean City, the young man who authorities believe was driving the Mercedes that struck him has been charged in connection to the crash.
Tyler Mailloux, 22, faces 17 charges in connection with the crash, including four felonies, according to court documents. The most serious charges, failing to stop at the scene of an accident resulting in death and failing to return to and remain at the site of a deadly accident, are both felonies that carry a penalty of up to 10 years in prison.
In a statement, Gavinโs mother Tiffany Knupp, his father Ray Knupp and his sister Summer thanked the Worcester County stateโs attorney, Kristin Heiser, and her team for the โdiligence and hard work that led to the filing of these criminal charges.โ
โThis presents an important step towards accountability for Gavinโs death, but it is just a step in that direction,โ the family said in a statement released by their attorney, Neil Dubovsky. โLet there be no confusion โ we will not rest until that process is completed, both through this criminal prosecution in addition to pursuing any and all civil remedies available to the Knupp family.โ
Attempts to reach Mailloux were not immediately successful. An attorney is not currently listed for him in online court records.
Heiser declined to comment on the case, citing the pending trial. Maryland State Police, which investigated the crash, also declined to comment.
Mailloux could face more than 42 years in prison and more than $50,000 in fines if convicted of all charges. He was also charged with failing to render aid to an injured person and failing to report the accident, among other charges, according to court records.
Court records show that police pulled over Mailloux seven times between April 2017 and March 2022, related to traffic offenses including speeding, failing to stop at a stop sign and not wearing a seat belt. He was found guilty of all but one, records show.
Mailloux was not arrested, but court summons were mailed to him; an initial court appearance is scheduled for May 31. Assistant stateโs attorney Paul T. Haskell is assigned to prosecute the case.
Gavinโs death and the initial lack of charges galvanized year-round residents in the close-knit communities of Ocean City and Ocean Pines. Shops and restaurants along Route 50 and Ocean Highway posted signs demanding โJustice for Gavinโ or โDo it for Gavin.โ
Tens of thousands joined social media movements on Facebook and TikTok demanding charges in the case. Supporters of the Knupp family sponsored billboard ads about Gavin, including one in Middle River, and distributed bracelets and stickers to bring awareness to the case.
Members of the Facebook group expressed cautious optimism at the news Monday. โMy heart goes out to your family. Praying that this is just the first step of getting Justice for Gavin,โ wrote one supporter.

In their statement, Gavinโs family thanked โour family, friends and the entire community for their love and support.โ
โWe will forever be grateful for the strength you have given us to keep fighting and we have only just begun,โ the family said.

Gavin, a warm and spirited boy who loved surfing, skateboarding, hunting and fishing, was riding to his Ocean Pines home with his older sister, Summer, one evening last July when he asked her to pull over on Grayโs Corner Road so he could look at a taxidermied stagโs head sitting on the side of the road. Gavin was walking back to Summerโs car when a dark-colored vehicle traveling on the access road sped by and struck him.
Summer, 17, called 911 and performed CPR on her brother, but Gavin was pronounced dead shortly after arriving at the hospital.
While Summer did not witness the impact, she saw a dark car speeding away. Maryland State Police crash scene investigators found the driverโs side mirror from a black Mercedes near the crash site.
About a week later, state police impounded a black Mercedes from a home in a posh section of Ocean City owned by Ralph DeAngelus, then a partner in an Ocean City restaurant group. His girlfriend, Kearston Frey, and her adult son, Mailloux, also reside in the home.
Friends and relatives of the Knupp family expected charges to be brought in connection with the crash soon after police seized the Mercedes, but as weeks passed, their calls for justice grew louder. They began to boycott the Matt Ortt restaurant group, for which DeAngelus worked, picketing a boardwalk restaurant and posting critical reviews online.
DeAngelus and his partners issued a statement in late July expressing sympathy to the Knupp family and stressing that DeAngelus, while not involved in the accident, โfacilitated the immediate notification to authoritiesโ when he learned about the crash on July 12.
In November, the Ortt group announced that it was severing ties with DeAngelus, Frey and Mailloux.
Gavinโs family created a foundation to honor him and have raised money to support causes close to the boyโs heart. They have helped support a little girl with a chronic disease and created a scholarship to send a teen to a New Jersey skateboarding camp that Gavin longed to visit.
On Monday, they were focused on the coming court appearance.
โItโs a relief that the case is finally moving forward,โ said Ray Knupp, Gavinโs father. โI was raising my best friend and I was robbed of the chance to see him grow up, to see the man he was going to become.โ
julie.scharper@thebaltimorebanner.com




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