Ravnsborg initially told a county sheriff dispatched to the crash site on U.S. Highway 14 near Highmore in central South Dakota that he thought he struck a deer. He said he returned to the scene the next morning and discovered he had struck a man.
Ravnsborg spokesman Mike Deaver did not immediately return a phone message Monday left by The Associated Press.
Whether Ravnsborg can be charged for distracted driving depends on what caused him to leave the roadway, Price said. A new state law that went into effect July 1 made texting and driving a primary offense that carries a $122.50 fine.
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Hyde County State's Attorney Emily Sovell, who is handling the case, did not immediately respond to a phone message seeking comment.
Boever's cousin Nick Nemec said he was not surprised to hear that Ravnsborg was distracted and drove onto the shoulder of the road. Nemec said he visited the crash site numerous times and "you don't have to be a rocket scientist" to figure out what happened.
"I think the attorney general should be charged at the very least with distracted driving," Nemec said. "If he was distracted, then you're getting into the territory of involuntary manslaughter. I think that would be an appropriate charge."
Ravnsborg, a Republican, is serving his first term after winning election in 2018.
While the investigation is largely completed, authorities said, they are still waiting on several reports, including a coroner's summary. The speed limit at the site of the crash is 65 mph, but it is unclear how fast Ravnsborg was driving. Price would not say whether Boever was walking with or against traffic.
Price would not describe what type of light Boever was carrying, but Nemac said it was not his cellphone.
"My brother Victor went into Joe's house the next day and Joe's cellphone was sitting on the table in Joe's house," Nemec said. "So that light had to be some other form of light."
The attorney general was driving home to Pierre from a Republican fundraiser some 110 miles away in Redfield. Ravnsborg had said he had nothing to drink.
A toxicology report taken roughly 15 hours after the crash showed no alcohol in Ravnsborg's system, although at least one expert said that would have been enough time for alcohol to leave the body.
A crash reconstruction expert from Wyoming and the North Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigation assisted the South Dakota Highway Patrol in the investigation.
Such accidents would ordinarily be investigated by the South Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigation, which answers to the attorney general's office. The other agencies took on the investigation to avoid a conflict of interest.
A preliminary autopsy report showed Boever died from extensive traumatic injuries from the crash.
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Report: South Dakota attorney general distracted before fatal crash - KSTP
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