Driver who mowed down Pepperdine seniors charged with murder

The driver who mowed down four Pepperdine University seniors in Malibu last week has been charged with murder, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department announced.

Fraser Bohm, 22, was taken into custody on Tuesday and is facing four counts of murder in the deaths of Niamh Rolston, Peyton Stewart, Asha Weir and Deslyn Williams.

The four young women were killed on Oct. 17 when Bohm lost control of his BMW while speeding on a notoriously dangerous stretch of the iconic Pacific Coast Highway.

He smashed into several parked cars before colliding into the foursome, who were walking nearby, police said after the crash.

Rolston, Stewart, Weir and Williams — all seniors from the same sorority — were declared dead at the scene. Two other victims were hospitalized.

Bohm, who stepped out of the vehicle unharmed, was tackled by witnesses.

Niamh Rolston was among the four Pepperdine students mowed down on Oct. 17.
Instagram / @niamhrolston
New York native Peyton Stewart will be posthumously awarded a diploma from the university.
LinkedIn / Peyton Stewart

He was originally arrested after the crash and charged with gross vehicular manslaughter. 

However, he was released “to allow detectives time to gather the evidence needed to secure the strongest criminal filing and conviction,” the sheriff’s department explained Tuesday. 

The evidence included a toxicology report, speed analysis and execution of search warrants, police said.

Law enforcement presented the case to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office on Monday and charges were subsequently filed.

Asha Weir was studying English at Pepperdine, where she also belonged to the Alpha Phi sorority.
LinkedIn / Asha Weir
Deslyn Williams, also a senior at Pepperdine, was struck and killed while she was walking with her friends.
Instagram / @deslyn.williams

Bohm is being held on an $8,000,000 bail. He is scheduled to appear in court on Oct. 25.

Police said the investigation is ongoing and no further information is available.

“The Sheriff’s Department is relentlessly working to ensure we get justice for the victims’ families,” the department said in a press release.

The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.

The tragic deaths, which occurred just four miles away from Pepperdine, devastated the close-knit community.

University officials announced that Rolston, Stewart, Weir and Williams, would receive their college degrees posthumously. They were set to graduate in the spring.

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