Share this post or save for later
Post last updated at 6:48 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9:
Deputies with the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office have made an arrest in a hit-and-run that killed 20-year-old Elsa McGrain, a premed student at KU.
A driver fled the scene after striking McGrain, who was running in the 1700 block of East 1500 Road Thursday evening, according to the sheriff’s office.
She was found several hours later when a passerby called dispatch around 3:35 a.m. Friday saying they had found a person near the road.
“After an extensive investigation, which included examining evidence and responding to numerous tips from the public,” deputies located the suspected vehicle and driver, according to a news release from the sheriff’s office on Sunday.
Don’t miss a beat … Click here to sign up for our email newsletters
Click here to learn more about our newsletters first
Deputies arrested William Ray Klingler, 36, of Lawrence, on suspicion of involuntary manslaughter, according to the DGSO booking log.
Detectives are working with the Douglas County district attorney’s office, according to the release.
“The Sheriff’s Office thanks area law enforcement agencies for their assistance in this investigation, as well as members of the community who responded with possible tips and shared information,” the sheriff’s office said in the release.
Douglas County District Court records indicate Klingler was charged in July 2024 with driving under the influence in what would be his fourth or subsequent conviction if found guilty.
He faces a few other charges in the same case, including circumventing an ignition interlock device, which is a device that requires people convicted of DUIs to take a breath test before their vehicle will start. That case is pending. He has several other previous traffic cases on his record as well.
Klingler had been arrested in August for failing to appear in court for the DUI case. His bond was modified to $10,000 own recognizance, meaning he was able to sign himself out of the Douglas County jail if agreed to abide several pretrial monitoring conditions.
He was being held without bond in the involuntary manslaughter case as of Sunday evening.
McGrain, who would have graduated next year, was a Lawrence resident originally from Omaha, according to the sheriff’s office.
“The Sheriff’s Office continues to extend our deepest sympathies to Elsa McGrain’s family members and friends during this incredibly tragic time and would ask the community to continue to support them,” the release stated.
Arrestees and defendants in criminal cases should be presumed not guilty unless they are convicted.
If local news matters to you, please help us keep doing this work.
Don’t miss a beat — get the latest news from the Times delivered to your inbox:
Click here to learn more about our newsletters first
![]()
This post is by the Lawrence Times news team.
If you have news tips, questions, comments, concerns, compliments or corrections for our team, please reach out and let us know what’s on your mind. Email us at Hello@LawrenceKSTimes.com (don’t forget the KS!), or find more contact info and a quick contact form at LawrenceKSTimes.com/contact.
Follow us so you won’t miss the local news that matters most to you:
Related coverage:
Share this post or save for later
The runner who was struck and killed by a vehicle Thursday evening north of Lawrence was Elsa McGrain, 20, a KU student from Omaha.
Share this post or save for later
A 20-year-old Lawrence woman was struck by a vehicle and killed just north of Lawrence Thursday evening, and the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office is asking the public’s help to identify the driver.
Latest Lawrence news:
Share this post or save for later
The Lawrence school board on Monday will consider approving about $575,000 worth of contracts to plan and design an expansion of Langston Hughes Elementary School.
Share this post or save for later
The runner who was struck and killed by a vehicle Thursday evening north of Lawrence was Elsa McGrain, 20, a KU student from Omaha.
August Rudisell/Lawrence Times
Share this post or save for later
Business owners along Ninth Street near downtown Lawrence are concerned they could face devastating losses and possibly even closures as city construction work will soon close the arterial street that’s key to their livelihoods for several months.
Molly Adams / Lawrence Times