Jose Hernandez Solano spent years working in the United States in order to send money back home to Mexico to support his three children and aging parents.
Friends said he was "strong as an ox" and worked long hours in local kitchens where he loved to cook, was quick to help others and always offered a smile and a hug.
Hernandez Solano was biking home last November from his job at Brasa Premium Rotisserie on Grand Avenue in St. Paul when an erratic driver struck him and left him in the roadway at Grand and W. 7th Street. Dozens of supporters packed a courtroom Wednesday as the driver, Dustin Hegner Royce, was sentenced to four years in prison on one count of criminal vehicular homicide.
"You ripped out a piece of our hearts," Georgia Meyers, who worked with Hernandez Solano at the former Christos restaurant in St. Paul's Union Depot, said to Hegner Royce. "A piece of us died when you took Jose's life. Had you met Jose, you'd be a better man."
Hegner Royce, 29, of St. Paul, pleaded guilty in June to striking Hernandez Solano. The crime occurred about 12:10 a.m. on Nov. 26. An unconscious Hernandez Solano, 52, was taken to a hospital, where he died several days later.
Ramsey County District Court Judge Nicole Starr settled on a midrange sentence for Hegner Royce, whose attorney asked for 10 years' probation or staggered incarceration spread over five years to be served on the anniversary of the crime.
Assistant Ramsey County Attorney Lee Atakpu pushed for the highest term possible, about five years. The low end of the sentencing guidelines called for a little over three years.
Atakpu said Hegner Royce tried to minimize his responsibility by saying at his plea hearing that he didn't know what he had hit, although surveillance video showed that Hernandez Solano was nearly centered with the front of Hegner Royce's SUV when he was struck. Hernandez Solano's bike lights were on at the time, and his body flew up onto the hood of the vehicle, Atakpu said.