Nice picture of someone apparently too stupid to operate front and rear brakes at the same time.
I think the facts have already established that that is about as likely as him shouting out the National Anthem.If he had a front brake though . . . ?
Nice picture of someone apparently too stupid to operate front and rear brakes at the same time.
Here's another nice picture.
I think the facts have already established that that is about as likely as him shouting out the National Anthem.
No, the only thing we've established is NSC doesn't know all the facts and wildly conjecture, as usual.
No, the only thing we've established is NSC doesn't know all the facts and wildly conjecture, as usual.
Alliston said he shouted twice after spotting Briggs. Asked why he did so, the defendant replied: “To make the pedestrian aware of my presence, so they were aware if they were to then cross the road.”
He said he directed a second shout towards Briggs and slowed down as he approached her, while manoeuvring his bike to avoid her.
“After the collision, I just jumped straight back up to my feet, turned around, saw what happened and then went blank,” Alliston said.
Alliston told the court that if he had had a brake, “I wouldn’t have had enough time to pull it. It was a few split seconds prior to the impact, which caused the impact, so a brake at the time wouldn’t have made a difference.”
Have you seen the NSC threads on drivers using mobiles?I am not so sure. I think, sadly, we have just become so accustomed to hearing about fatal accidents caused by drivers disregard for the law that we just shrug our shoulders and barely give it a moments thought.
It depends on the profile of the court case etc.I read in the Argus today about a young driver arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving after killing his passenger in a crash. I doubt there will be a thread on that or much outrage for a life needlessly lost.
No he didn't. His back wheel was fixed to the pedals, but that's not the same thing.1) He had back brakes.
Most cars aren't 2 tonnes either. It was still a fast moving vehicle, easily capable of killing someone. It could have been a child instead of an adult he hit.2) It wasn't a 2 tonne car and there was no mobile phone.
It wasn't a kid, it was an adult. He was driving a dangerous illegal bike on the road. He may well have tried to swerve, no one is saying he killed her on purpose (that would be murder rather than manslaughter), but I expect she'd have lived if his bike was road legal.3) It was just a kid on a bike trying to swerve past a pedestrian that hadn't looked (as I read it).
Well it's not that I want them, it's just basic to determining guilt and culpability.You want ifs?
Yes, so you can argue contributory negligence.If she hadn't walked out into the road and walked back into him she'd be alive.
Firstly, it wasn't necessarily 10mph, it could have been 18. Secondly, with brakes he might have stopped altogether, he had time to call out twice. Thirdly, if he had hit her at a lot less speed, then she probably would have lived. You say 'no idea', but that's wrong. There are adverts on tv explaining that speed kills and pedestrians have a much greater chance of survival when vehicles are going slower.If with extra brakes he hit her at 5 rather than 10mph would she have died? No idea, no-one has.
Agreed. Her punishment is death, you think his should be nothing.It was an accident, both were to blame.
That's hearsay. His online posts don't look like the posts of a man that is scarred for life.The kid is going to be scarred for life, let him suffer with that.
Because many cyclists condider themselves above the law
Because many cyclists condider themselves above the law
from the Guardian:
he shouted twice, he slowed; he had time to react yet not enough to avoid crashing. its hardly wild conjecture to suppose that's because he had insufficient braking.
Or that the pedestrian was on the phone and walked into him
it does seem that a large proportion of cyclists feel that the road traffic act does not apply to them.
No he didn't. His back wheel was fixed to the pedals, but that's not the same thing.
So he had no brakes at all? His argument that he was ignorant of the fact he needed a front brake surely goes out the window if he had no brakes? That is surely common sense to have some way to stop.
(as an aside i'm pretty sure i knew from about 6 years old that you needed both front and back brakes to cycle on the road)