A San Francisco police officer known by many as the “Hot Cop of the Castro” was sentenced to nine months in county jail Wednesday after he was found guilty of a hit-and-run in November, 2015. In addition to his jail sentence, Christopher Kohrs will also be on probation for three years and will have to pay restitution to the two victims of the collision.

Judge Carol Yaggy presided over the trial, which lasted two weeks in March. After a jury found Kohrs guilty, he was immediately remanded into custody without bail, based on the fact that he fled the scene of the collision after it took place, evading police for more than eight hours before finally turning himself in.

Kohrs was driving his highly-recognizable orange Dodge Charger on the night of Nov. 29, 2015, when he collided with two pedestrians at the corner of Broadway and Montgomery streets. The impact was so severe that the car’s windshield was smashed, the driver’s side mirror broke off, and pedestrian Frank Vichez suffered a broken nose, a broken eye socket, a broken neck, a brain hemorrhage, a spinal fracture and memory impairment. The second victim lost a tooth, and had a broken jaw, a fractured ankle, and an injured shoulder ligament.

As Kohrs had been out at a club with two friends prior to the incident, prosecutor Rolando Mazariegos argued that he fled the scene to avoid taking a breathalyzer test, and suffering drunk driving charges.

But Kohrs’ defense attorney Peter Furst claimed Kohrs ran away after an angry crowd gathered, and recognized him for his prior fame as the Hot Cop of the Castro. However, this failed to impress the jury, who confirmed Kohrs’ guilt on March 16.

Kohr was suspended without pay from the San Francisco Police Department, pending the investigation and trial. Based on his recent sentencing, chances are he won’t be wearing anything but an orange jail uniform anytime soon.

Daniel Montes of Bay City News contributed reporting to this story.