DUI ARREST Brian Greer, a retired correctional officer named as a person of interest in his father's 2009 unsolved murder, was charged with driving while intoxicated in connection with an unrelated DUI crash. Credit: File Photo By Steve E. Miller

A Paso Robles man named as a person of interest in the 2009 slaying of his father is facing multiple felony charges in connection with a DUI crash unrelated to the case.

DUI ARREST Brian Greer, a retired correctional officer named as a person of interest in his father’s 2009 unsolved murder, was charged with driving while intoxicated in connection with an unrelated DUI crash. Credit: File Photo By Steve E. Miller

The SLO County District Attorney’s Office filed charges of driving under the influence against Brian Scott Greer, 51, in connection with the Sept. 30 crash. In addition to the drunk driving charges, Greer faces possible sentencing enhancements for causing great bodily injury to the other vehicle’s occupants, who were both over 70 years old.

According to the CHP, Greer was intoxicated and driving his 2002 Ford Excursion westbound on Creston Road when he made an “unsafe turning movement” into the eastbound lane. Greer’s vehicle collided with a 2001 GMC Yukon, causing his Excursion to roll over. The occupants of the Yukon were identified as William Ryan, 78, and Barbara Ryan, 86, according to court records. The Ryans and Greer suffered moderate injuries and were transported to two different hospitals, according to the CHP.

Greer pleaded not guilty to the charges at an Oct. 4 arraignment, according to court records. A judge set his bail at $300,000. As of Oct. 10, Greer remained in custody in SLO County Jail.

In the months prior to the crash, SLO County Sheriff’s investigators announced that Greer was a person of interest in the 2009 murder of his father, 71 year-old Templeton resident Jerry Greer. Jerry was found shot to death in his home in the 2000 block of Santa Rita Creek Road on March 28, 2009. To date, the case has remained unsolved. In August, investigators served search warrants on Greer’s Paso Robles home and vehicles. They also served a search warrant on another home in Paso Robles where Greer previously lived.

As of Oct. 10, Greer had not been arrested or charged in connection with his father’s death. In social media posts, he denied any involvement in his father’s murder and accused the Sheriff’s Office of harassing him. In a Sept. 30 voicemail he left New Times at 11:39 a.m., roughly nine hours before the crash, Greer said aunts and uncles—who were upset because his mother left his father when he was a child—were to blame for the Sheriff’s Office’s focus on him.

“They are feeding [the Sheriff’s Office] a bunch of misinformation about me and my mom,” Greer said. “This all stems from the hatred of a dysfunctional family.”

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Chris McGuinness is a New Times staff writer covering crime, criminal justice, and local government in SLO County. Follow him on Twitter at @CWMcGuinness Send news tips to cmcguinness@newtimesslo.com...

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2 Comments

  1. This story is inaccurate. I admitted fault at the accident scene and pled Guilty in court only to be trumped w a not guilty plea entered on my behalf by the public defender. My bail was increased from 100k to 300k only after I refused a plea deal offered by the DA to admit to killing my Dad. This is my third post to your site after you continue to remove them. Are you not interested in truthful journalism ? Or is NewTimes another so woke and broken to allow my rebuttal to be viewed so the general public can get both sides of the narrative.

  2. Oh I’m sorry did I violate your comment policy? Please do tell what I can do differently to inform the public of the truth. Is it wrong for me to admit fault for an accident I created? Or to plea guilty in court? Your story is jaded and inaccurate. I reserve the right to inform you especially if you choose the false narrative status qou to promote your” news” agency. Your not going to perpetuate lies about me without my say. It’s called free speech. And due process

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