A young Florida woman sent her ex-boyfriend disturbingly prophetic text messages just moments before she got into a fatal car crash.

The incident occurred almost two years ago in August 2013 when Mila Dago, who is now 24 years ago, got behind the wheel after a night of drinking and barhopping, reports the Miami Herald. 

According to officials, Dago had just broken up with her boyfriend over an argument and had sent him 60 bitter text messages throughout the course of the night.

In one message she wrote, "I'm done you ruined me ... you'll be the death of me." While another message read, "Driving drunk woo ... I'll be dead thanks to you." Three minutes later she ran a small rented Smart Car through a red light and crashed into a truck around 4:44 a.m., police said.

Although she survived the crash, her friend Irina Reinoso, 22, who was sitting in the passenger seat, did not, reports the New York Daily News.

The truck driver, Benjamin Byrum, 51, said he was lucky to only have been knocked unconscious.

"The Smart Car is what saved me," Byrum told the Herald. "If it had been anything bigger, I would have been in trouble."

Officials say that Dago had more than twice the legal blood alcohol content limit for driving a couple hours after the crash.

She was arrested in January 2014 but posted a $20,000 bail and was put under house arrest after her release, NBC Miami reported.

The 24-year-old has been charged with DUI manslaughter, vehicular homicide and two counts of DUI with damage to a person. She has plead not guilty.

"Ms. Dago, who, with her family, prays every day for the young woman who passed and her family, believes it is disrespectful to the young woman's family to publicly comment," her defense attorney, David Rothman, said.

In the meantime, Reinoso's family has filed a civil suit against Dago and the mobile rental company, Car2Go. In the suit, they claim that the company should have safeguards, like breatherizers, in place that would prevent drunk drivers from renting cars.

"It's been a very hotly contested case," said the family's lawyer. "We do believe we're going to be successful in the case, helping to make Car2Go safer and getting justice for Irina's parents."