Prosecution testimony got underway Monday in the trial of a former Palm Desert High School football coach accused of running over and killing a 64-year-old caregiver while driving under the influence.
Cameron Francis Curtis, 33, of Palm Desert allegedly fatally struck Nancy Valdes, also of Palm Desert, in 2023. Curtis is charged with second-degree murder.
The prosecution and defense delivered opening statements Monday afternoon, after which the government called its first witness at the Riverside Hall of Justice. Riverside County Superior Court Judge Bernard Schwartz directed jurors to return to the downtown courthouse Tuesday morning for additional testimony.
Curtis is being held without bail at the Byrd Detention Center in Murrieta.
Sheriff’s Deputy Page Broughton testified in the defendant’s October 2023 preliminary hearing that on the evening of March 4, 2023, there was a call to investigate reports of a pedestrian down, and the deputy found Valdes dead in the intersection of Calliandra Street and Alamo Drive.
Broughton said Curtis was located stopped nearby in his Nissan Frontier pickup. He was detained without incident.
Valdes was a caretaker for a local senior and had just left to walk the woman’s dog when she was hit while crossing the street, according to Broughton. Detectives later determined Curtis had allegedly been drinking alone that afternoon for almost three hours at Stuft Pizza, two miles from where the victim was hit.
Based on restaurant receipts, the defendant drank 91 ounces of beer and two shots of hard liquor before leaving, according to investigators. A bartender told detectives that Curtis was a regular and routinely sat alone at the bar for hours.
Deputy Joshua Kemper testified that when he arrived at the fatality, Curtis told him he was aware of what he had done and had “bloodshot watery eyes, slurred speech, (and) strong odor of alcohol emitting from his breath.”
Though the defendant had no prior driving under the influence convictions, by way of his then-position as a teacher and athletics coach, he had participated in “Every 15 Minutes” programs, which provide beginning-to-end re-enactments of DUI tragedies, complete with emergency medical treatment, an arrest, conviction and burial service — all for the benefit of high school students learning the rules of the road.
Prosecutors alleged that during his two-mile trip home, Curtis maneuvered around traffic to avoid a stoplight and then blew through a stop sign on eastbound Calliandra before hitting the victim.
The defendant is no longer employed by the Desert Sands Unified School District.
He has no documented prior felony or misdemeanor convictions in Riverside County.
