BOONE COUNTY, Ind. (WISH/WLFI) – An Indiana judge sentenced a woman Wednesday for causing the August 2015 car crash that took a Purdue employee’s life.

Thirty-three-year-old Stephanie Shrock, a dental hygienist in Lafayette, entered a plea agreement in March for the crash on U.S. 52 near State Road 47. Her plea agreement was amended with a sentencing of three years on community corrections, but it’s up to Judge Bruce Petit to decide.

On Wednesday, Shrock was sentenced to six years. However, due to her plea agreement, she will be on supervised probation for five years and 340 days and three of those years will be on house arrest. The judge also suspended her driving privileges for two years.

A psychologist testified that Shrock suffered from severe survivor’s guilt, depression and anxiety following the crash. The psychologist said she was very upset by what the family thought upon hearing that the driver was “intoxicated,” though Shrock said she felt no affects of drug use the morning of the crash.

In the courtroom Wednesday morning, Shrock tearfully recalls the events of Aug. 18.

“I didn’t feel fuzzy, I didn’t feel clouded,” Shrock said. “I did not at all feel impaired.”

Shrock said her use of marijuana was infrequent and she didn’t feel affects of the drug at all that day. Shrock told the court Wednesday the last time she used marijuana was two days before the crash.

“It wasn’t a frequent thing,” she said.

During the hearing, Shrock turned to the victim’s family and cried. She told the family this:

“I have thought of all of you every single day and the guilt that I feel on taking away your person, your loved one, your family. I’m so sorry. It’s unimaginable what you guys are going through. I was so angry for you that on top of all the emotions you’re dealing with then you find out if that person had not only smoked that morning, which of course I didn’t. I’m so sorry that we are sitting here, that this is how we are meeting. I hope that you can continue on the path of healing, which is so vital. I pray for your comfort.”

The family was also in tears. Shrock offers that she would like a relationship with victim’s family if they are at all comfortable.

Shrock learned her fate for charges including causing death when operating a motor vehicle with a schedule I or II controlled substance in the blood, a level four felony. Four other charges, a felony and three misdemeanors, were dropped as part of the agreement.

Shrock was accused of driving with THC in her system when she caused the crash that killed 45-year-old Jacquelin Harp, who worked at Purdue University.

Investigators said Shrock was reaching for a cup of coffee when she drove off the roadway, overcorrected, crossed the median and struck Harp’s vehicle head-on.

Court documents also said that Shrock’s urine tests came back positive for cannabinoids.What others are clicking on: