Story highlights An Ohio man says he killed another man in a drunken driving incident

Matt Cordle made the confession on the Internet

He says he wants to take full responsibility

The victim, Vincent Canzani, was a veteran and gifted photographer

Matt Cordle's confession doesn't beat around the bush: "I killed a man."

The Ohio man claims in a video posted on the Internet this week that he killed 61-year-old Vincent Canzani in a drunken-driving crash in June.

"I take full responsibility for everything I've done to Vincent and his family," Cordle says in the video.

The 22-year-old has not been charged with any crime, but Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O'Brien said Cordle is a suspect in the deadly crash and a grand jury will be asked to indict him for aggravated vehicular homicide.

The video is well-produced and powerful. Cordle's face is blurred as he begins to tell his story about being out with friend, drinking heavily and losing control the night of June 22.

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Attorneys that he consulted with offered to help him avoid any punishment -- "all I had to do was lie" -- but he decided to come forward instead.

And he wants his video to be a warning to others.

"I can't bring Mr. Canzani back, and I can't erase what I've done, but you can still be saved, your victims can still be saved," he says on the video.

When he gets charged, he will plead guilty, Cordle added.

The video was posted on a website called "because I said I would," which provides a forum for people to make promises to others.

The founder of the website, Alex Sheen, said Cordle reached out to him via Facebook.

"There are a lot of emotions and parties at play here, so we stay in touch as much as possible," Sheen said. "Matt is doing as well as he can. He's upset that people are calling his act of confession 'courageous' rather than focusing on the real issue: drinking and driving kills innocent people."

Cordle's current lawyer, George Breitmayer, told CNN affiliate WBNS he did not know beforehand that the video would be released.

"The video he released is a testament to both his integrity and his character, and I know that he intends to fully cooperate throughout the tenancy of all these proceedings," Breitmayer said.

The crash

Canzani was driving a Jeep when he was struck by a wrong-way driver on I-670 near Columbus, according to the Columbus Dispatch.

A Toyota Tundra was driving in the wrong direction and hit the Jeep about 3 a.m.

Canzani was declared dead at the scene.

The newspaper story did not name Cordle.

The victim

Canzani was a veteran and gifted photographer, according to his obituary.

He studied at Columbus College of Art and Design and served in the Navy as a missile technician in the Naval Submarine Service from 1980 to 1986, the obituary states.