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Man gets 4 years in hit-and-run that killed Indiana girl

Shiam Sunder Shankara Subramanian
Shiam Sunder Shankara Subramanian

A man  convicted in the  hit-and-run death of a 16-year-old Indiana high school student struck by his car as she prepared to board a school bus was sentenced Thursday to four years in prison.

Shiam Sunder Shankara Subramanian also was sentenced to two years on probation in the death of Lilly Streeval on Aug. 30, 2021.

Subramanian, 26, of Columbus, was  charged in September 2021 with leaving the scene of an accident resulting in death or catastrophic injury and passing a school bus while the arm signal is extended causing death.

Investigators said Subramanian struck Streeval in Columbus as she attempted to cross two lanes of traffic to reach her stopped Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. bus.

The Columbus East High School student was pronounced dead at a hospital.

Police said Subramanian drove away from the scene but was followed by a witness and taken into custody after his car got stuck in a yard in Columbus, a city about 40 miles (64 kilometers) south of Indianapolis.

Subramanian, an engineer, is a citizen of India and in the U.S. on a work visa.

In 2019, Indiana  lawmakers approved tougher penalties for drivers who pass school buses with extended stop arms after  three children were fatally struck while crossing a highway to board a bus.