“My family had to wait two years to hear him apologize,” Humberto Munoz said after Victor Kwak, 24, said he was sorry for killing Sandra Munoz-Molina the night of Aug. 22, 2013.
It was too little, too late, Munoz told Judge Edward A. Jerejian in Hackensack.
"She wasn’t just a sister to me, she was a mother of four kids," he said. "They now have to see other kids happy, and they don’t have a mother.”
Turning to Kwak, Munoz said: “If you would have spent $20 that night to go from the bar to your house, this would not have happened. If you have time to go to the gym, you could have spent 20 minutes to come apologize to my family.”
Kwak — who authorities said had a blood-alcohol level of .198 — hung his head through most of the sentencing until the victim's loved ones spoke.
Her four little boys sat quietly in the second row of the gallery, at times huddling together. The youngest, only five, sat on his father’s lap and stayed close.
Assistant Bergen County Prosecutor Martin Delaney grimaced after Kwak claimed he "made a mistake."
"This is not a mistake you can make and apologize and then everything is okay," he said. "Look at the misery in this courtroom, misery caused by that criminal -- and beyond criminal, an idiotic, stupid decision to get behind the wheel of that car.”
Kwak pleaded guilty in April, admitting he’d had several mixed drinks before the crash.
Authorities said his Lexus went up on the sidewalk on Railroad Avenue, knocked down a tree, a street light and a utility pole, then rammed into Munoz-Molina, who was headed home from her beauty parlor job.
She died at Hackensack University Medical Center days later.
Kwak must serve four years and two months before he's parole-eligible.
“You killed someone," Jerejian said. "So I am giving maximum weight to the need to deter, not only to you specifically but as a general deterrent -- because you cannot drink and drive.”
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