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Bureau of Indian Affairs police confirm that a woman sought in a June crash that killed the driver of a street sweeper on the Uintah and Ouray Reservation has turned herself in.

Wilda Annie Manning, 49, had been named in an arrest warrant issued by a Ute tribal judge in connection with the June 3 death of Steven Goodrich, 25. The warrant alleged vehicular homicide in the crash, in which Manning's GMC Yukon rear-ended the street sweeper on a Uintah County road running through the reservation community of Randlett.

Goodrich, who was not wearing a seat belt, was partially ejected and became pinned under his rig.

Manning, after being treated for minor injuries at the hospital, initially could not be found by investigators.

However, BIA officers reported, she turned herself in late Wednesday after learning of the warrant.

Manning was in BIA custody pending court proceedings, likely federal due to the alleged crime having occurred on reservation land.

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