Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh dear lord. I am now going to yell.
SHE WAS STANDING NEXT TO HER PARKED MINIVAN ON A RESIDENTIAL STREET IN FRONT OF AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. THAT IS NOT RISKY BEHAVIOR.
By the way, PP, do you ever go anywhere in a car? That's very risky. If you get hit by a drunk driver, it will be partially your fault, for being in a car.
Was she on the sidewalk or standing in the street?
She was standing in the part of the street that is intended for people on foot to use.
It's a novel interpretation of risk minimization to say that people on foot must not ever step into the street.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh dear lord. I am now going to yell.
SHE WAS STANDING NEXT TO HER PARKED MINIVAN ON A RESIDENTIAL STREET IN FRONT OF AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. THAT IS NOT RISKY BEHAVIOR.
By the way, PP, do you ever go anywhere in a car? That's very risky. If you get hit by a drunk driver, it will be partially your fault, for being in a car.
Was she on the sidewalk or standing in the street?
Anonymous wrote:Oh dear lord. I am now going to yell.
SHE WAS STANDING NEXT TO HER PARKED MINIVAN ON A RESIDENTIAL STREET IN FRONT OF AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. THAT IS NOT RISKY BEHAVIOR.
By the way, PP, do you ever go anywhere in a car? That's very risky. If you get hit by a drunk driver, it will be partially your fault, for being in a car.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in a trauma center, and I still can't believe how many people just rush out into crosswalks and run on the side of the road. People are crazy! Cyclists, joggers take real risk. One day we had three deaths, and two of them became organ donors. Two cyclists and one jogger. Then the ones who live...severed limbs?
People, even if you have the right of way, assume that the drivers are drunk or impaired in some way. TAKE NO CHANCES.
Safe places to jog are sidewalks, to cycle, use bike paths, not bike lanes on roads.
Nothing is worth that.
Yes, this is good advice. I was hit by a car really bad whe walking with my newborn a few years ago. I now assume no one is paying attention. I also make it a point to tell my kids, as we are walking through parking lots etc, to have their heads up and eyes PAYING ATTENTION to cars etc.
I am so sorry for that victim's family. What a tragedy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pay tribute by slowing down and sharing the road.
+ 1 to infinity
+1,000,000
Less than 2yrs ago, Jennifer Lawson was struck and killed by a truck driver as she loaded her toddler into her minivan. Just like Ms Bogart, she was doing her normal, everyday thing just like all of us do. The threads on that tragedy were dozens of pages long, IIRC. At the time, many posters encouraged all of us to slow down, be aware of those around us, and so on.
I wonder how many people still do? Are you still consciously more careful, especially in school zones or residential streets? Have you stayed slow, stayed alert, and stayed off your phone?
And many posters on DCUM said that it was her own fault for not loading her toddler into the minivan from the sidewalk side. It was horrible.
I agree with all of the PPs here -- please pay tribute by slowing down and sharing the road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The driver might knothole seen her. If he sits high up, and she is down close to his truck.
The truck driver was a woman.
Anonymous wrote:The driver might knothole seen her. If he sits high up, and she is down close to his truck.
Anonymous wrote:I work in a trauma center, and I still can't believe how many people just rush out into crosswalks and run on the side of the road. People are crazy! Cyclists, joggers take real risk. One day we had three deaths, and two of them became organ donors. Two cyclists and one jogger. Then the ones who live...severed limbs?
People, even if you have the right of way, assume that the drivers are drunk or impaired in some way. TAKE NO CHANCES.
Safe places to jog are sidewalks, to cycle, use bike paths, not bike lanes on roads.
Nothing is worth that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in the area, and travel on Commonwealth and Braddock very often, sometimes multiple times a day. From what I understand the truck was traveling eastbound on Braddock and making a right hand turn on the southbound lanes of Commonwealth and basically clipped the woman, who was jogging I think. Why she was in the road I don't know. Others have pointed out that there is a bunch of overgrown bamboo there right by the bus stop, so maybe she always runs in the street or at this point was in the street to run around the bamboo. Whatever, it really doesn't matter.
Over the last few days I have found myself going southbound on Commonwealth and getting stuck at that intersection at the red light and being the first car waiting for the light to change so I can continue through the intersection going south. As I wait for the light to change, I watch the cars coming down Braddock and turning right (as they have the green light) and car after car after car is flying through the 25 mph zone and taking that right turn insanely close to the curb, when there is an ample amount of room to take an appropriately wider (but not too wide turn). I see people with zone 7 parking stickers (for Rosemont) so they must live in the neighborhood. I cannot believe how fast they are going, and how close they get to the sidewalk when they turn to the right. one after the other after the other. It is no surprise that if someone is just driving along like that that it was inevitable someone would get hit. I am surprised more cars don't just completely jump the curb. I wouldn't be entirely surprised if this particular driver took the turn just as narrow, going just as fast as all the others and didn't have time to stop or may not have exactly seen someone who would have been on her passenger side before there was a collision. But I have a very hard time believing the driver didn't know she had hit something 1) based on the insanely gruesome aftermath, part of which I saw, that was so stained on the road they had to pave over it the next day, 2) the tire tracks are still there and show some erratic driving right after the point of impact and 3) it has been reported in the neighborhood from several sources the truck driver made a comment to the construction crew where she dropped her load 4 blocks from the accident that "she thought she might have hit something back there" yet she didn't drive back by to check. Instead she just drove back to Maryland. If I thought I had hit something with my huge construction truck, I would have stopped or at least gone the 4 blocks back to where I thought it had happened. But this person just left, left the state in fact.
One last point, Virginia is a contributory negligent state. If the victim was indeed jugging in the road, it may be the driver just gets charged with leaving the scene of an accident, and not vehicular manslaughter. I think unless it can be proven the driver was grossly negligent (excessive speeding, texting or talking on a cell, etc.), the hitting part may not charged. It's the running part that is the problem. The sad accident mentioned above where the woman was hit by the trash truck in front of her kids' school, I think that driver stayed at the scene of the crim. and I don't think the driver was charged, partially because the mother was unfortunately partially in the line of traffic on the driver side of the car buckling in the child in the back seat.
Well, the Washington Post reported that she was walking, not jogging. As the strike took place at intersection it was likely the victim was crossing the street in the crosswalk, most likely with the light. The jogging is a red herring. I'd be wary of "neighborhood sources."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/crime/woman-identified-in-fatal-hit-and-run-in-alexandrias-del-ray-neighborhood/2015/09/04/05159bba-5323-11e5-933e-7d06c647a395_story.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pay tribute by slowing down and sharing the road.
+ 1 to infinity
+1,000,000
Less than 2yrs ago, Jennifer Lawson was struck and killed by a truck driver as she loaded her toddler into her minivan. Just like Ms Bogart, she was doing her normal, everyday thing just like all of us do. The threads on that tragedy were dozens of pages long, IIRC. At the time, many posters encouraged all of us to slow down, be aware of those around us, and so on.
I wonder how many people still do? Are you still consciously more careful, especially in school zones or residential streets? Have you stayed slow, stayed alert, and stayed off your phone?
Anonymous wrote:I live in the area, and travel on Commonwealth and Braddock very often, sometimes multiple times a day. From what I understand the truck was traveling eastbound on Braddock and making a right hand turn on the southbound lanes of Commonwealth and basically clipped the woman, who was jogging I think. Why she was in the road I don't know. Others have pointed out that there is a bunch of overgrown bamboo there right by the bus stop, so maybe she always runs in the street or at this point was in the street to run around the bamboo. Whatever, it really doesn't matter.
Over the last few days I have found myself going southbound on Commonwealth and getting stuck at that intersection at the red light and being the first car waiting for the light to change so I can continue through the intersection going south. As I wait for the light to change, I watch the cars coming down Braddock and turning right (as they have the green light) and car after car after car is flying through the 25 mph zone and taking that right turn insanely close to the curb, when there is an ample amount of room to take an appropriately wider (but not too wide turn). I see people with zone 7 parking stickers (for Rosemont) so they must live in the neighborhood. I cannot believe how fast they are going, and how close they get to the sidewalk when they turn to the right. one after the other after the other. It is no surprise that if someone is just driving along like that that it was inevitable someone would get hit. I am surprised more cars don't just completely jump the curb. I wouldn't be entirely surprised if this particular driver took the turn just as narrow, going just as fast as all the others and didn't have time to stop or may not have exactly seen someone who would have been on her passenger side before there was a collision. But I have a very hard time believing the driver didn't know she had hit something 1) based on the insanely gruesome aftermath, part of which I saw, that was so stained on the road they had to pave over it the next day, 2) the tire tracks are still there and show some erratic driving right after the point of impact and 3) it has been reported in the neighborhood from several sources the truck driver made a comment to the construction crew where she dropped her load 4 blocks from the accident that "she thought she might have hit something back there" yet she didn't drive back by to check. Instead she just drove back to Maryland. If I thought I had hit something with my huge construction truck, I would have stopped or at least gone the 4 blocks back to where I thought it had happened. But this person just left, left the state in fact.
One last point, Virginia is a contributory negligent state. If the victim was indeed jugging in the road, it may be the driver just gets charged with leaving the scene of an accident, and not vehicular manslaughter. I think unless it can be proven the driver was grossly negligent (excessive speeding, texting or talking on a cell, etc.), the hitting part may not charged. It's the running part that is the problem. The sad accident mentioned above where the woman was hit by the trash truck in front of her kids' school, I think that driver stayed at the scene of the crim. and I don't think the driver was charged, partially because the mother was unfortunately partially in the line of traffic on the driver side of the car buckling in the child in the back seat.
Anonymous wrote:
One last point, Virginia is a contributory negligent state. If the victim was indeed jugging in the road, it may be the driver just gets charged with leaving the scene of an accident, and not vehicular manslaughter. I think unless it can be proven the driver was grossly negligent (excessive speeding, texting or talking on a cell, etc.), the hitting part may not charged. It's the running part that is the problem. The sad accident mentioned above where the woman was hit by the trash truck in front of her kids' school, I think that driver stayed at the scene of the crim. and I don't think the driver was charged, partially because the mother was unfortunately partially in the line of traffic on the driver side of the car buckling in the child in the back seat.