When Kelli Boyd wants to visit with her 17-year-old son Clayton, she now goes to the Micanopy Historic Cemetery near her Gainesville home.

Last year, Clayton was killed after he collided with a car while out riding his motorcycle with friends.

According to a Gainesville police investigation report Boyd provided us, Clayton was pronounced dead at the scene. He died of blunt force trauma.

Nearly 15 months after saying goodbye to the boy she called "Boo," Boyd is hoping her sons death will lead to a change in state law mandating toxicology tests in fatal crashes where negligence played a role.

She calls it Claytons Law. A petition she recently posted online has more than 20-thousand signatures.

What I am trying to do with Clayton's law is, whenever a fatality occurs where negligence is i

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