Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Wasn't Wearing a Ball Gown

I meant to comment on a story that appeared yesterday in the Arizona Daily Star. Better late than never, so….

The Star reported that a driver used his minivan as a weapon, deliberately rear-ending a motorcyclist who was blown off his bike and underneath a car waiting to make a U-turn. The driver was booked into the slammer on suspicion of second-degree murder.

The rider was dead at the scene. The Star story ends with the apparently obligatory observation that the rider was not wearing a helmet. Oh well, that explains it, it’s really the rider’s fault.

This tired old refrain is really very poor reporting, unless there is evidence that a helmet would have saved the rider’s life. If there is no such evidence, then the report that he wasn’t wearing a helmet is no more pertinent than the observation that he wasn't wearing a ball gown. All across America car drivers kill motorcyclists. In many (and I suspect most) cases they’d be dead helmet or no helmet.

It is not motorcycles that are dangerous, it’s automobiles and their drivers.

2 comments:

Art Jacobson said...

Oh, come on, George. I didn't say every driver is bad. It's fair to observe, however, that bikers don't kill car drivers by turning left in front of them, running stop lights, or driving under the influence of drugs, alcohol or cell phones.

There are single motorcycle accidents, almost always the result of biker carelessness.

You can kill a motorcyclist with a car and get away with a ticket for failing to yield the right of way.

Art Jacobson said...

George... the following paragraphs are from the American Motorcyclist News

A van driver in Iowa crosses the center line of the road, running head-on into a group of six motorcyclists. Three are killed, and two more are seriously injured. The driver gets off with a fine of $70—less than an average speeding ticket.

In Oklahoma, a driver runs over a motorcyclist who was slowing to make a right turn. The driver pleads guilty to negligent homicide. She is sentenced to 30 months probation and ordered to perform unspecified "acts of kindness."

A U.S. congressman from South Dakota with a long history of traffic offenses blows through a stop sign at over 70 mph, causing a crash that kills a motorcyclist. A jury takes just a couple of hours to convict the driver of second-degree manslaughter, a felony that carries a maximum sentence of 10 years. The judge gives him just 100 days.

A Maryland woman who drove her car into the back of a motorcycle, killing the rider, avoided a vehicular homicide charge by quickly paying a fine for the lesser offense of negligent driving.

Since the woman, in essence, pleaded guilty to negligent driving by paying the fine, she couldn't be charged with vehicular homicide in that same case. To do so would violate constitutional protections against double jeopardy, which involve trying a person twice for the same offense.

9:09 PM