A 20-year-old North Dakota woman is facing up to five years in prison after she rear-ended another car while driving at 85 mph and looking at Facebook photos, which led to the death of an 89-year-old great-grandmother.

Abby Sletten was charged with negligent homicide in the death of Phyllis Gordon of Ada, Minnesota during her appearance at the Traill County District Court on Wednesday, reports KARE 11.

According to police reports, Gordon was riding as a front-seat passenger in an SUV with her granddaughter, Jennifer L. Myers, 34, on a highway near Hillsboro back in May. However, as Myers slowed down to make an illegal U-Turn, Sletten allegedly rammed her SUV from the back, according to the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.

Sletten is accused of scrolling through Facebook photos right before the crash, which took place along the northbound Interstate 29 between Fargo and Grand Forks, on in the afternoon of May 27.

A police search of Sletten's cellphone "determined that [she] was viewing pictures on her Facebook application ... at the time of the crash," according to the criminal complaint. "Sletten had also sent and received several text messages since she departed from Fargo."

Gordon died at the scene even though "several people were performing [CPR]" in an effort to revive her as she was on the ground next to the vehicle in the median.

The criminal complaint also states there is no evidence Sletten tried to brake, which "suggested the possibility that Sletten may not have seen the vehicle in front of her or that she was possibly distracted while driving."

Sletten reportedly told an official that she had no recollection of the car crash.

Gordon's granddaughter and one of her great-grandchildren survived their injuries.

Gordon, who worked in grocery stores and as a baker and a home health aide, leaves behind her eight grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren.