It's not that she was jaywalking, it's where she was jaywalking with a pack of little kids. It's a busy street at night, and you have a herd of little kids with you. Go to the damn cross walk, we learned this in elementary school.
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Jumping Jehoshaphat! Wut in tarnation is this world coming to? (Nice Title Edit Mods)
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It said the guy "had been drinking earlier". I didn't read that the dude was brought up on DUI/DWI charges, so he apparently wasn't drunk enough to be proven. Otherwise I'm quite certain that the police would have been more than happy to add that charge on top of a hit and run.
This is a horrible situation. Ultimately, we can't see the road, the traffic situation on that day,how the driver was driving, etc so I can't really say where the judgement should fall.
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Originally posted by Fern View Postmy mind is full of fuck right now.
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I choose to answer all the "If she crossed at a crosswalk she would have been safe because the drunk driver would have already passed" arguments with a hypothetical of my own, since we are dealing with completely unpredictable situations here. What if he hadn't been drinking? If he hadn't been drinking he may have had the reaction times to stop. What if he slowed for some reason to allow enough time for them to get to the crosswalk and ran them over anyway?
My point here is that you can't deal in hypothetical la-la-land, and it was the woman's attorney's job to establish that. There are so many factors in play here that you have an idea of what COULD have happened differently, but no idea that it WOULD have happened differently. The guy was drinking and driving, hit the kid, and fled the scene, not to mention this was his 3rd offense with the same charges (minus the manslaughter). The driver is guilty. Period. The woman should not escape without punishment, obviously, but manslaughter is quite a bit more than what should have been handed down, in my opinion.
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Originally posted by TENGRAM View PostPedestrians have the right of way.
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Originally posted by SS Junk View PostEvery pedestrian crossing a roadway at any point other than within a marked crosswalk or within an unmarked crosswalk at an intersection shall yield the right of way to all vehicles upon the roadway unless he has already, and under safe conditions, entered the roadway.
You do not have the right to run over a pedestrian just because they didn't use the crosswalk. Crazy, huh?
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Lets say it was a sober driver, and accident occurred. Driver stayed on the scene for police and paramedics. Is it SUDDENLY the womans fault now because the driver wasn't drunk?
I fail to see how the manslaughter charge should go against the driver. The whole purpose of the jaywalking law is to restrict street crossings at a safe and acknowledged location.
How many people have hit a deer or some other animal suddenly crossing the street? Well, that was your fault, not the animal's!
Originally posted by TENGRAM View PostIn other words, as long as this woman didn't jump out from behind a car directly into the path of the drunk driver, she had the right of way.
You do not have the right to run over a pedestrian just because they didn't use the crosswalk. Crazy, huh?sigpic
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Originally posted by TENGRAM View PostIn other words, as long as this woman didn't jump out from behind a car directly into the path of the drunk driver, she had the right of way.
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Originally posted by SS Junk View Post... or suddenly start walking into the street into traffic. It also gives scenarios when it is legal to walk across an unmarked street. We have no idea if the street she was on fell under the legal means to cross.
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Originally posted by TENGRAM View PostIt doesn't matter if she crossed legally or not, if the driver could have avoided her and didn't then he is at fault since she had the right of way.
(b) No pedestrian shall suddenly leave a curb or other place of safety and walk or run into the path of a vehicle which is so close that it is impractical for the driver to yield.
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