A Savage man admitted in court Monday that he shouldn’t have been driving the night he had a seizure in early December 2016 and ran head-on into another vehicle on Interstate 494, leaving three dead, including a toddler.

Patrick Hayes made the admission in Hennepin County District Court when he pleaded guilty to five counts for causing the fatal wrong-way crash, authorities say.

Hayes entered the pleas as a jury was about to selected for his trial. He pleaded guilty to three counts of criminal vehicular homicide and two counts of criminal vehicular operation for his conduct, according to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office.

No sentencing date was set as Hayes is reportedly scheduled to undergo a serious medical procedure.

A hearing will be held in late September to determine if his health is strong enough to proceed to sentencing and prison, the attorney’s office reported.

The state intends to ask that he serve an eight-year term.

During his guilty plea, Hayes admitted that there had been a change in his epilepsy medication while he was still living in Texas that made him more prone to seizures, the attorney’s office said. His medication was changed a second time when he moved to Minnesota, increasing his chances for a seizure even more.

That made his decision to drive the evening of Dec. 2, 2016, “grossly negligent,” according to the attorney’s office.

Hayes wound up having a seizure behind the wheel and blacking out, so he doesn’t remember the crash, according to his testimony in court Monday, the attorney’s office said.

He was driving his tan Chevy Malibu west on I-494 in Bloomington near the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport when he suddenly pulled over to the right shoulder, made a U-turn, and started heading east in the westbound lane just east of the 24th Avenue exit.

He eventually collided head-on with a blue Jeep Cherokee. Payton Bailey, 2, was among the passengers in the Jeep. The toddler died about a week after the crash. His mother, Dylan Bailey, and grandmother, Dawn Chiodo, were also in the vehicle, the attorney’s office reported. Both died the night of the wreck.

The family members had just left the airport, where they’d picked up Olivia and Jennifer Nord.

Olivia Nord had just graduated from Marine Corps boot camp, and Jennifer Nord, of Richfield, had been in South Carolina attending her daughter’s graduation. Chiodo, a family friend, was driving the Nords home from the airport when the collision occurred.

Both Olivia and Jennifer sustained serious injuries in the crash.

Hayes was observed suffering a seizure at the scene of the crash and was given anti-seizure medication, court documents say. A blood test revealed no alcohol in his system at the time.

He’d failed to disclose his condition when he applied for Minnesota driver’s licences during the past five years — a requirement under state law, according to court documents.

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St. Cloud bicyclist killed by hit-and-run driver, State Patrol says A review of Hayes’ medical records indicates he has suffered from epilepsy since he was 16 years old. Investigators also discovered that Hayes had been involved in three previous crashes since 2014, at least one of which involved a seizure, court documents say.

Hayes’ attorney could not be immediately reached for comment.