I get the father's grief, but it might not be enough to let him walk. Juries are funky- they don't always make the 'right' decision. But what's right?
Let me present another view; your son, a good kid, makes good grades, but has a substance abuse problem you're unaware of- despite him having been caught out there before. But its your kid, you love him, right?
Now, he's gone and done something really, really stupid that ended up killing someone else; the father of that someone else just murdered your son - vengeance for the death of his own.
By your own admission, at least for some of you on here, you would have killed the offendor yourselves, for revenge. I get that feeling, I do. Which would also mean that you should understand if the father of the drunk driver sought this man out and killed him- for having prematurely ended his son's life. Vengeance knows no reason, it has no faculties with which to make informed decisions- it is emotionally driven; as such most people understand it viscerally, even though their minds might tell them it is wrong, in the heat of the moment you have a split second when a choice is made; some would have you believe that they 'had no choice' or 'it just happened'- all this is bullshit. The choice was made in the heat of the moment; sad thing is, he could kill everyone else on the face of the planet and it still wouldn't bring his sons back to life, and I doubt it'd make him feel any better for having done so. Not to mention, what if the drunk driver's parents feel the need for retribution? As a parent, I can tell you- I get where this guy came from, but the same might be said for the other father. If I was that other father, I couldn't promise you that I wouldn't return the favor- despite what my kid might've done, you don't have the right to take their life. If you take it upon yourself to make that decision, you could also open yourself to action in kind- and you'd have to accept it seeing as you took the first step down this road.
I have to say some of these responses are a bit disappointing- I expect knee jerk reactions from the rabble, but you fellows are smarter than that. Sir Brian, what if it were your son or daughter who got drunk at a party and had an accident like this one? Would you really stand by after someone killed your daughter- spur of the moment, righteous anger, deserved vengeance...would that truly apply?
Revenge is never lawfully justified- and it serves no purpose but to cause more heartache; the parents of the drunk driver lost their son who I assume they loved...and the father of those kids, who has already lost so much may now also lose his freedom...who wins, eh? Who benefits from all of this?