Was bound to happen?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/trafficandcommuting/bike-riding-isnt-childs-play-anymore-and-cycling-crash-deaths-are-soaring/2017/08/23/abbcb22e-8773-11e7-a94f-3139abce39f5_story.html?utm_term=.c1fbf630d23a :x
By Ashley Halsey III August 24 at 12:01 AM 

Other than riding a bicycle, they seemed to have very little in common beside the fact that they died on the same weekend this month, and that their deaths got minor mention in the local press.

Ronald Michael Peter Hill, 30, died at the scene when he was struck by a car in Tulsa, around 9 p.m. on Aug. 11. Several hours later, Albert Arnold, 57, died at an intersection in south Los Angeles. The death of Joseph Lee Stanley, 42, on a Sacramento street came just after midnight Sunday morning, about 20 hours after Arnold died.

In all three cases, the driver involved kept going, which is not uncommon in collisions between cars and bicyclists.

At least three other cyclists — one in Oregon and two in Washington state, ages 53, 19 and 50 — would die before the weekend played out.

Forty years ago, riding a bike was child’s play, and the overwhelming majority of those killed in bike crashes were children. Over the years, biking for fitness and as part of the daily commute have changed that dramatically. According to a report released Thursday, the average age of cyclists killed in collisions in 2015 was 45.

The report by the Governors Highway Safety Association, with funding from State Farm insurance, also determined that the increase in bike deaths of 12.2 percent in 2015 outpaced the rise in overall traffic fatalities.

“More of us are getting out and riding our bikes, and that’s great,” said Jonathan Adkins, executive director of the safety association, “but we’re seeing [cycling] deaths go up by about 55 deaths per year.”

The report also found: Alcohol was a factor in 37 percent of fatal bike crashes, with drivers doing the drinking in 12 percent of the cases and bike riders drinking in 22 percent, the latter a decline from 38 percent 10 years ago;

• Though it’s estimated that 45,000 cyclists were injured in crashes in 2015, the report said police probably record a fraction of those crashes because bikes don’t get towed from crashes and cars rarely need towing after colliding with a cyclist;

• The majority of fatal bike crashes — 72 percent — took place on the roadway rather than at intersections;

• Distracted driving was to blame for 76 cyclist deaths out of 818 in 2015;

• More than half of cyclists killed were not wearing a helmet;

• Bike fatalities were evenly split at 47 percent between those riding in daylight and those riding after dark, though only 20 percent of bike rides take place after dark;

• A third of people surveyed said they had biked in the past year, but the number of children biking to school has dropped from almost half to 2.2 percent since 1969.

[For bicyclists and drivers, navigating traffic is a two-way street

In some of the 55 cities that have established bike-share programs, infrastructure that regulates and separates cyclists from drivers lags behind systems that already have a combined 42,000 bikes on the road. There have been just two crashes fatal to cyclists involving shared bikes since the first bike-sharing program opened in 2010, the report said.

The report recommended more marked bike lanes, more clearly defined bike lanes that separate riders from cars, bike boxes at traffic signals that give riders a head start when a light turns green and traffic signals that provide an advanced green signal specifically designated for cyclists.

“When we bike, we have as much right to the road as when we drive,” said Vicki Harper, spokeswoman for State Farm. “Unfortunately, when bikes and cars collide, cyclists are much more susceptible to serious injury or death.”

The GHSA is a coalition of state roadway safety officers, and the report suggested that each state should include cycling safety programs in its comprehensive highway safety plan.

The report commended Congress for its requirement that states “fully integrate nonmotorized accommodation in all surface transportation projects.” But it chastised lawmakers for restricting the ability of states to use federal highway funds for cycling safety education and enforcement programs.
 
The fingers said:
The report also found: Alcohol was a factor in 37 percent of fatal bike crashes, with drivers doing the drinking in 12 percent of the cases and bike riders drinking in 22 percent
I suppose the other 66% of the time the alcohol was such a big puddle on the ground it caused a skid and fatal crash? Or maybe the rider crashed into a barrel and drowned?

Their numbers don't make sense even if they meant the 12 and 22 as portions of the 37 rather than of the alcohol-related fatalities.




“When we bike, we have as much right to the road as when we drive,” said Vicki Harper, spokeswoman for State Farm. “Unfortunately, when bikes and cars collide, cyclists are much more susceptible to serious injury or death.”
Yet they won't insure bikes or riders....
 
https://cyclingindustry.news/surprising-promise-of-bicycling-in-america-study-soon-to-land-as-free-download/
Also available on facegram/instabook. :pancake:
“Surprising promise of bicycling in America” study soon to land as free download
 24 August, 2017 Mark Sutton
The upcoming market report “The Surprising Promise of Bicycling in America” by Jay Walljasper is soon to be available to the bicycle industry as a free download.
In announcing the report, Walljasper described 2017 as an important year and one that marks 50 years since the first on-street bike lanes landed in Davis, California, as well as 20 years since the bicycle industry committed to funding political movement Bikes Belong.
“If you look at the bike infrastructure we had 20 years ago and what we have today, it’s mind-boggling,” says John Burke, president of Trek Bicycles. Burke also pledged the first $100,000 for the Bikes Belong campaign.
Sponsored by Bosch eBike Systems, the report centres on eight positives for the trade:

Bicycles now outsell cars in the U.S.Bicycling isn’t just for temperate climates – bike commuting is way up in places like New York and Minnesota
The increase of women and people of colour in bike advocacy leadership is radically changing who ridesNetworks of protected bike lanes are making riding make safe and appealing for people 8 to 80
Bicycling is not just for young white males—low-income people bike more than anyone else, older Americans account for more than 1/3 of new bicyclists each year, and Latinos ride more than any other racial group
Bikeshare, which is changing who rides a bike, is available at tens of thousands of street side stations across the country with the swipe of a credit card
Safe Routes to School and other innovative programs are successfully engaging a new generation of children and their parents to bike
E-bikes are the fastest growing category of bicycle sales in the country because they’re breaking down many of the barriers—hills, distance, wind—for a wider group of riders

Veteran bicycle advocate Charlie Gandy said of the voice of those pushing for change: “The growth of organized local volunteers trained to tell their stories and who are strategically supported by well-staffed advocacy organization – their mission is to show that communities can be safe, fun and convenient for bicycling are safe and fun and vibrant for everyone.”
The report will be available for download on Tuesday, September 19th at PedalLove.org/Promise-of-Bicycling. To receive a reminder of the download businesses can sign up here.
 
https://www.yahoo.com/news/canada-bike-cops-nab-one-americas-most-wanted-203643260.html :D
Montreal (AFP) - Canadian police on bicycles have nabbed one of America's most wanted criminals in a chance encounter during a routine patrol of Montreal streets.
Katay-Khaophone Sychantha, 35, a Laos national living in Canada, was wanted both in the United States and in Ontario province for narcotics trafficking and related crimes.
The two policemen tried to arrest two men for drug possession on a city bike path when one of them tried to flee, officials said Monday.
Giving chase, one of the officers quickly caught up to the suspect, but would only learn his identity after taking him back to a police station for fingerprinting, and matching those to prints in a US Homeland Security database of the 10 most wanted criminals.
They also noted a description in the warrant saying he was missing the tip of his middle finger on his right hand.
Sychantha is the suspected ring leader of a drug-smuggling organization that supplied ecstasy pills and marijuana to distributors in several US states.
He allegedly directed individuals to smuggle millions of dollars in cash, guns, cocaine and heroin from the United States into Canada.
 
http://www.southtahoenow.com/story/08/29/2017/man-faces-dui-charges-after-crashing-bike-two-pedestrians :x
Paula Peterson
A 41-year-old man is in custody after allegedly riding a motorized bicycle while intoxicated and crashing into two pedestrians who were in a crosswalk in South Lake Tahoe on August 27, 2017.
Patrick Bryan Baker was riding on Lake Tahoe Boulevard when, at approximately 7:25 p.m., he ran into two pedestrians who were in the crosswalk at Rufus Allen Boulevard according to South Lake Tahoe Police Sgt. David Stevenson.
The unidentified male and female had just begun to cross on a "walk" signal when they were hit. Both victims were injured.
South Lake Tahoe Police and Fire Rescue teams arrived with JPA paramedics and Baker attempted to walk away from the scene according to the police report.
Both victims were transported to Barton to receive treatment.
Baker was transported to the El Dorado County Jail where he was booked on felony charges of DUI with BAC of .08 percent or above causing injuries and Hit and Run causing injuries, as well as a misdemeanor charge of obstruction. His bail was set at $103,000 and, as of Tuesday morning, he remains in jail.
 
http://fox5sandiego.com/2017/08/30/man-escapes-on-bicycle-after-robbing-chase-bank/ :evil:
SAN DIEGO — Police say a man robbed a Chase Bank in the Bankers Hill area of San Diego Wednesday.
The robbery happened shortly before 3 p.m. in the 2500 block of 5th Avenue. A man entered the bank, gave a demand note to a teller and rode away on a bicycle.
The man is described as white, in his 50s, 5-feet-5-inches tall and wearing a red tank top and long pants.
Robbery detectives were investigating.
Anyone with information related to the robbery is encouraged to call Crime Stoppers at 888-580-8477.
 
This woman says she's a journalist, so when is CNN going to hire her? You hear one guy telling the boyfriend "Dump her."

[youtube]YkzFllkyMdQ[/youtube]

And this one, not a citizen of this earth but she has all the rights.

[youtube]yqN6ebsqEco[/youtube]
 
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/downtown-miami/article170916047.html :x
Jimmy John’s delivery biker gets hit by Miami police officer. And he winds up in jail.
BY LINDA ROBERTSON
SEPTEMBER 01, 2017 11:43 PM
A Jimmy John’s delivery cyclist was hit in a downtown crosswalk Thursday afternoon by a Miami police officer driving an unmarked car.
But it was the sandwich deliveryman who went to jail. For 12 hours.
Mason Morales was arrested for criminal mischief after he threw his bike against the car in anger, then handcuffed in the middle of the street and placed in a cell at the Turner Guilford Knight Correction Center until his mother bailed him out at 3 a.m. Friday.
"The whole thing was pretty awful and stupid," Morales said. "I don’t think I should have been brought in for that.
“And they gave me a ticket, too, for failure to yield right of way.”
Morales, 19, was riding back to the Jimmy John’s shop at 45 W. Flagler St. near the county courthouse when he was struck by a car rounding the corner from Flagler onto Northwest Miami Court. He landed on the pavement but was not injured.
“I was in plain view but they kept driving and hit my back wheel," he said. "It was not a major impact. I think she was on her phone and didn’t see me."
The driver was Officer Kenia Fallat, a spokesperson for the Miami police department.
Morales, who gets abused daily by Miami drivers, picked up his single-speed Leader bike and tossed it against the passenger side door, leaving a dent. Then Fallat got out of the car. Morales saw her uniform and realized he was in trouble.
"I saw she was a cop so I knew I had f----- -up," he said. "This was my second run-in with this police lady. One time before in the same area she didn’t hit me but it was a near miss. She was on her phone."
Morales said he was ordered to put his hands on the hood of the car as Fallat called backup.
"I kept my cool even though 10 cops showed up. I’m not sure why this little incident required that number," he said. "They searched me and put me in cuffs."
Morales was charged with criminal mischief, with damage to the car door estimated at $500, according to the police report. He was detained at Miami police headquarters for three hours, then transferred to TGK where he said "there were a bunch of people in orange jumpsuits" until he was released in the wee hours.
"I deal with this every day — drivers who don’t pay attention to where they’re going,” said Morales, who lives in Miami and works full-time at Jimmy John’s. “I’ve been hit before. I broke my nose once."
Fallat and Miami police declined to comment on the accident.
 
http://www.cnn.com/videos/world/2017/09/12/plane-crash-landing-connecticut-sje-lon-orig.cnn

I was trying to find an explanation for why the plane was so low. Hoping for a hard turn emergency landing?
 
From what little I can see it looks like he was taking off but did not have enough height or speed, and veered from the runway path for some unknown reason.

He could've been landing instead, and aborted from it for whatever reason, trying to do a go-around but not having enough height or speed didn't make it past the trees. If so, he'd've been better off going all the way to the end of the runway before turning, as he would've had more time to gain speed and height (something that's hard or even impossible to do when turning unless you have a lot of power and lift vs drag and weight).

The veering from the runway is the odd part. :/

The airport it happened at is here:
https://www.google.com/maps/@41.6905362,-72.8665798,824m/data=!3m1!1e3
and the crash spot is in the parking lot of Carling Technologies lot, which is to the west of the middle of the runway. It's at the south end of the buildings, so the camera is pointed south and slightly east, which means the runway itself is actually a short distance away to the left of the camera, out of sight, and nearly perpendicular to the terminal line of flight of the plane.
 

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I was a pilot when I could afford it. The flaps are down which is normal in a landing but unusual in a takeoff. Especially if he needs speed and altitude. The sketch of the path further suggests an approach. If he's doing a go around he's supposed to instantly put his flaps up. HOWEVER, if he was practicing a short field takeoff he'd do that with his flaps down, bunny hopping the plane into the air at an unfortunately low speed; if he panicked he might not pull the flaps up instantly as he's supposed to and that could complicate matters, but I practiced full flap normal takeoffs and it's readily doable.

Terminology: A spin is when both wings are stalled, the airflow over them not enough to provide lift. The plane will still move forward with it's momentum, there's the picture of it falling straight down but that's only that you can be coming down 3/4 of a mile in a minute and you'll probably drop below that in forward momentum. If one wing stalls, you have that wing drop and the plane turns to that side as it falls. There's your great danger in a short field takeoff. If he didn't level the plane off quickly enough he might get a stall warning, the flaps reduce the speed that the wing stalls at and he may be deciding to put them back down though I would question moving your hand that way at such a critical moment.

One other thought, this guy might have read 'Fate is the Hunter.' Aviations' greatest writer, Ernest Gann, tells the tale of his takeoff in a C-49 transport version of a B-24 bomber during WWII where they'd overloaded him with cargo and fuel and he couldn't get up enough airspeed to climb out or even turn without stalling. With the plane heading straight at the Taj Mahal and history, in more ways than one, if he hits the building. With the stall warning sounding, Gann desperately begins flipping the flaps, which raises the nose at low speeds and lowers the stall speed but also causes more drag and will slow the plane. You have to wonder how sure he is of just how well this was working, given the panic he'd be in. But somehow the plane cleared the top of the legendary building without adding to the legacy or leaving his mark on history. He said he could see workers on the outside with their panicked faces looking at him.

So maybe this pilot thought of that story at that moment, getting his flaps back down as he approached that tree in hopes of popping the stalling plane up just a little to clear that tree. Or maybe it's more as I described before, though that's not as fun to think about.
 
https://theconversation.com/cars-bicycles-and-the-fatal-myth-of-equal-reciprocity-81034
Any public conversation about on-road cycling in Australia seems to have only one metaphor for the relationship between drivers and cyclists: equal reciprocity.
An utterance like “Drivers must respect cyclists’ space on the road” must inevitably be followed by something like “For their part, cyclists must ride responsibly and obey the road rules.”
For instance, the campaign promoting a new road safety law in New South Wales tells us:
Drivers, bicycle riders and pedestrians all need to Go Together safely. We should all respect each other’s space and ensure that everyone stays safe.
Most cyclists hardly need to be reminded to respect the space of a two-tonne vehicle travelling at 80km/h just centimetres from their elbow. Yet the wording, as well as the fines imposed, suggests cyclists have as much power to disrespect drivers’ space as vice versa.
The idea that the space someone’s car occupies on the road is personal space, where the car is treated as a proxy body with its own right not to be molested, shows just how far this notion of reciprocity has gone.
Why does the metaphor of equal reciprocity so powerfully organise our thinking about a relationship that is so clearly asymmetrical? One explanation is that these debates go on in a public sphere subject to a simplex version of philosophical 5liberalism wherein all things must be treated as equal.
As Patrick Stokes argues for hierarchies of racial difference, attributing an abstract equality to human beings tends to erase real differences in power and privilege. Public conversations about cycling in Australia erase the reality that cyclists’ safety is to a very large extent not in their own hands, but in those of drivers.
David Graeber observes that reciprocity is our default way of thinking about equality. It’s synonymous with:
… the sense of equity, balance, fairness and symmetry, embodied in our image of justice as a set of scales.
Graeber adds:
Almost everyone continues to assume that in its fundamental nature, social life is based on the principle of reciprocity…
If we think of the road in this way, it seems reasonable that all cyclists have to do to “earn the respect” of drivers is to conspicuously obey the road rules and not complain too much when “equal” penalties are applied. Many cyclists feel this way. For me, however, they are suffering the lycra equivalent of Stockholm syndrome.
For what if the road is not democratic and egalitarian? I don’t deny that driver-cyclist interactions are very often co-operative, respectful and convivial. But all too we see other kinds of relations played out, based on hierarchy, marginalisation, othering, domination, exclusion, intimidation and violence.
When we try to make sense of this within a reciprocity mindset, we usually say such behaviour is deviant, involving anti-social individuals. It’s a partial explanation, but not a total one.
The fact is the Australian road is not a neutral space. It is ordered by what sociologist John Urry calls the system of automobility.
Urry argues that this is the most transformative system the world has ever seen, one that puts the motorised vehicle at its centre. All other forms of travel, he says:
… have to find their place within a landscape predominantly sculpted by the car system.
As well as all the economic and political interests invested in this system, both public and private, we need to consider the social and cultural meanings these produce around the automobile.
In Australia, ideas of maturity, freedom and autonomy are powerfully entwined with the mythos of the car. These “cultural preferences” are so strong that they often act to erase cyclists’ legal rights and status not only on the road, but also in the courts and when dealing with police.
When cyclist meets driver on the road, both are notionally equal individuals encountering each other in a democratic, rule-governed and neutral public space. But only if the driver chooses to make it like this. Otherwise, they are in a deeply asymmetrical relation, both physically and culturally.
At times as a cyclist among the cars I feel like an insurgent in hostile territory. By now some readers might assume I am advocating cyclist rebellion and lawless riding. I’m not. Cyclists should do their best to be civil and rule-abiding on the road, at least where it doesn’t put us in danger.
At the same time, we can’t expect great or immediate results from this offer of reciprocity to the drivers around us. To suggest that the person at the wrong end of a heavily unequal relationship can gain recognition and equality simply by offering to “respect the space” of the dominant subject is wishful thinking.
I despair that mainstream bicycle advocacy has to be limited to something like the “metre matters” law. For me, this is the political equivalent of pleading “Please don’t kill us!” – and this law has been applied only a handful of times to penalise drivers.
Many who support this law concede it is mainly useful as a means of publicity and driver education rather than as a legal tool. Courts having long had other means to punish at-fault drivers in car-on-bike crashes if they so chose.
While at first glance the one-metre rule may seem like a special legal protection for a class of vulnerable road users, it in fact functions as a wishful attempt at recognising and enacting rights and protections that have long existed in law.
I ride daily in Canberra and know many cyclists. Anecdotally, the new law hasn’t made a jot of difference to how people drive or to how police and courts deal with cyclists who get hit or harassed.
Readers may object that the law can do no more than extend equal rights and protections to all road users. But that’s not true. Strict liability legal regimes go beyond this to offer special rights and protections to vulnerable road users.
Policymakers in all but five European Union nations accept that all road users are not equal. They recognise the failure of a principle of one-to-one reciprocity whereby we’re all safe because we all have the same formal status and follow the same rules.
These jurisdictions prefer a communitarian approach that acknowledges some groups need “special treatment” to create a level playing field.
There’s little doubt a strict liability regime is at present “politically impossible” in car-centric Australia. However, attempts to fix things that assume voluntary reciprocity can work are also destined to fail.
I certainly don’t have the answers, but I do believe we need to think outside the box of mutual reciprocity to make progress.
 
http://fox6now.com/2017/09/19/prosecutors-wife-turns-in-husband-after-fatal-hit-and-run-he-said-he-thought-he-hit-a-deer/ :cry:
TREVOR -- 39-year-old Ryan Peterson of Salem is now charged in connection with a hit-and-run crash that killed a bicyclist in Trevor. Peterson and his wife called authorities one day after the crash --  and because that happened at least 16 hours after the crash, blood wasn't drawn, so despite the fact that prosecutors say Peterson admitted to drinking before and after the crash, he's not facing OWI charges.
Peterson is charged with the following:
Hit-and-run, resulting in deathHomicide by negligent operation of a vehicle
This, for the death of Jackie Hutcheson Jr., or JJ.
Hutcheson's parents were furious Tuesday, September 19th as they learned of the details in this case and saw the suspect in court.
Delise Hutcheson and Jack Hutcheson Sr.
"He was drunk and he waited 16 hours," Delise Hutcheson, Jackie's mother said.
"It was the alcohol. We did not know at the time," Jack Hutcheson Sr., Jackie's father said. "I appreciate he turned himself in. We have to forgive him someday so God can forgive us. We have so much hate in our heart right now. It's not going to be today or in the near future."
"He took a life -- a young man's life who had everything going for him," Delise Hutcheson said.
Crews responded to the area of Highway FJ (260th Avenue) near Highway C (Wilmot Road) around 9:45 p.m. on Sunday, September 17th. The investigation on scene revealed that a 29-year-old man identified as Hutcheson Jr. was riding a bicycle northbound on 260th Avenue when he was struck from behind by a vehicle also traveling northbound. Hutcheson died at the scene due to the injuries he sustained.
"A passerby found a bike on its side. He was ejected from the bicycle. No skid marks. We have no indication at this time how fast the vehicle was driving," Mark Malecki with the Kenosha County Sheriff's Department said.
Authorities say the vehicle left the scene in an unknown direction after the crash. The speed limit in this area is 35 miles-per-hour.
A criminal complaint indicates a 911 caller came up on Hutcheson at the scene -- turning back because "something didn't seem right." He said he noticed a bicycle on the east side of the road, and a body in the ditch line. He saw no signs of breathing, and Hutcheson was unresponsive. He was identified via an ID found in his wallet.
Small vehicle parts were found scattered at the scene -- a few with a Volvo logo on them, the complaint says. Investigators noticed some of the pieces had parts numbers on them, and an online search revealed the parts appeared to come from a 90s or early 2000s Volvo.
The complaint notes that the roadway was dark except for a farmhouse light on the west side of the road. Hutcheson's bicycle did have a reflector mounted on the spokes of the rear rim.
The complaint says the investigation revealed driver in this case did not attempt to slow down or maneuver to avoid the collision. Hutcheson was struck from behind by the vehicle which had been traveling on the gravel shoulder.
Hutcheson's death was determined to have been caused by blunt force trauma to the head.
One day after the crash, investigators were contacted by Peterson's wife, who indicated she had learned that her husband "thought he hit a deer" on Highway JR around the time of this crash -- and he did not stop at the scene.
Investigators spoke with Ryan Peterson, who indicated while heading northbound on Highway JF on September 17th, he "became distracted as he attempted to plug in his cell phone," and he hit something he thought was a deer. His passenger side windshield was shattered, and Peterson said he slowed down and checked his rearview mirror, and didn't see anything, so he went home.
When he got home, he and his wife checked the damage to his Volvo, and put it in the garage.
The complaint indicates Peterson told investigators he'd had "several alcoholic drinks" earlier in the day before the crash, and a couple more when he got home, but he said he believed he was sober at the time of the crash. The timeline he offered was that he had dinner at his brother's house and consumed three drinks in the afternoon before dinner, and two more during dinner. He said he watched the first half of the Packers game at his brother's house before driving himself home. After the crash, when he returned home, he said he had a couple more beers while finishing the Packers game.
Investigators checked the damage to the Volvo, and the complaint indicates it was consistent with the vehicle striking a bicyclist.
Peterson made his initial appearance in court in this case on Tuesday, September 19th. Cash bond was set at $15,000 -- and a preliminary hearing was scheduled for September 28th.
 
I've believed for a long time that the only way we'll cure the hit-and-run problem is by regarding leaving the scene as proof of intent. If you didn't do it on purpose, you stay. If you leave, it's because you meant to do it. And then we get you for intentional homicide.
 
Dauntless said:
I was a pilot when I could afford it. The flaps are down which is normal in a landing but unusual in a takeoff. Especially if he needs speed and altitude.
That aircraft is either a C172 or C182. The C172 POH calls out flaps between 0 and 10 degrees on takeoff. The C182 POH calls out flaps between 0 and 20 degrees on takeoff. In both cases, during short field takeoffs, flaps are recommended since they will allow shorter takeoff rolls, and shorter distances to climb above a 50 foot obstacle.
 
https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2017/09/21/bicyclist-says-she-didn-pull-over-for-arlington-police-bit-protest/OwSFcKpijnQzLemRKREbrL/story.html :eek:
Bicyclist says she didn’t pull over for Arlington police as a bit of a protest
By Steve Annear GLOBE STAFF  SEPTEMBER 21, 2017
A 59-year-old Belmont woman was arrested by police in Arlington this week after she failed to stop her bike at a stop sign along the Minuteman Bikeway and refused to pull over for a bike-mounted officer. She said she ignored the officer as a kind of protest.
Karen Cady-Pereira, who says her charges were later dropped, said she just wanted to get home Monday night when she slowed her bike at the Lake Street intersection before deciding to cruise right through.
“My impression that I have is the cars were already stopped because there was somebody [crossing],” she said. “I said, ‘I’m clear,’ and I went.”

But a police officer stationed on a bicycle nearby was less casual about Cady-Pereira’s traffic maneuver.
According to a police report, the officer tried to stop Cady-Pereira by stepping into her path, putting out his hand, and telling her to pull over.
The report said Cady-Pereira made eye contact with the officer before steering her bike around him, and continuing on her way. After telling Cady-Pereira a second time to pull over, the officer got on his bike and proceeded to chase her down the path.

“This officer drove next to the bicyclist and tapped her on the shoulder and stated to pull over and the bicyclist again ignored this officer’s commands,” the report said.
The chase lasted approximately 50 yards, police said, before the officer “had to drive his bicycle” in front of Cady-Pereira, cutting her off and forcing her to stop.
At that point, the officer asked Cady-Pereira if she had heard his repeated commands.
“She stated she did hear and see this officer,” the report said. “But she doesn’t think that it’s right that the police stop bicyclists and the police should stop cars not bicyclists.”

Backup was called to the scene, and Cady-Pereira was placed in handcuffs, police said. She was charged with disorderly conduct, failure to stop, and a stop sign violation, and escorted to the Arlington police station.
In a telephone interview Thursday, two days after the charges were dismissed in court, Cady-Pereira said she disobeyed the officer because she was set on her destination and felt “annoyed” that an officer tried to stop her — and then followed her — for riding through a stop sign on the path.
“I let it take over me,” she said, adding that she is more careful when traveling on main roads. “I’m also a person who has a hard time not changing direction. If I’m doing something, I have a lot of inertia.”

Cady-Pereira said when she was finally forced to stop because the officer had pulled in front of her on the path, a route she is familiar with as a daily commuter, things escalated quickly.
“I was totally out of line, but I think he overreacted,” she said. “He came after me, and he was just exploding with anger. I felt like I was on a kind of movie.”
The incident marked the second time in recent months that an Arlington police officer pursued a cyclist on the bike path who had disobeyed traffic laws, before eventually arresting the person. Charges in that case were also dropped.
Cady-Pereira was open to talking about her own situation because she believes cyclists should be treated more like pedestrians — not vehicles — when it comes to certain traffic laws. She said her choice to ignore the officer’s requests was a form of protest — albeit one she didn’t execute well.
“I would like to see the laws change. I don’t think this ‘bikes are equal to cars’ thing should stay on the books,” she said. “We need a separate set of rules. . . . There are more and more bikes out there, and the rules need to change.”
 
http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2017/09/more-fatal-accidents-as-e-bikes-grow-in-popularity-in-the-netherlands/
:(
More fatal accidents as e-bikes grow in popularity in the Netherlands Society September 21, 2017    More people are now being killed on the Dutch roads while riding an electric bike than in moped accidents, according to new figures on traffic-related deaths. Since 2014, at least 79 people have been killed in road accidents while using an e-bike, of whom 87% were over the age of 60, police figures show. An e-bike is a normal bike fitted with an electric motor and sales have been soaring in recent years. The death toll is ‘very worrying,’ police spokesman Egbert-Jan van Hasselt, who heads a road safety team, told the AD. ‘People are staying active for longer and are more likely to go for an e-bike. But unfortunately, some of them lack the skills to control them.’ Van Hasselt says people should take a course in using an e-bike. ‘They are not a normal bike,’ he said. ‘They give you and extra boost and sometimes that happens when you don’t expect it.’ In addition, older users should wear a helmet, Van Hasselt said. Another problem is that bike paths are becoming busier, with a greater variety of two-wheelers, and that brings its own problems, he said. Last year, 629 people died in road accidents in the Netherlands, of whom 189 were cyclists, and 28 were on e-bikes. Police do not expect a downward trend this year. According to RTL, most deaths occur on roads where the maximum speed is 50 kph and 41% of people are killed close to home.
 
http://www.cnn.com/2017/09/22/health/earthquake-frida-sofia-identifiable-victim-effect-trnd/index.html

The reason 'Frida,' the trapped little girl, gripped our imagination
By AJ Willingham,

(CNN)The drama was palpable. Somewhere, under a collapsed school building in Mexico City, a little girl named Frida Sofia was trapped.
Rescuers scraped through the rubble, racing to set her free. We were riveted.
After a horrific 7.1 magnitude earthquake devastated the capital city, we were all pulling for an uplifting rescue.

The problem was, Frida Sofia didn't exist. That came out two days later, when the Mexican navy said it was sorry for the erroneous information.
It happened during the 1985 Mexico quake as well. Then, as now, a little child trapped in debris gripped the imagination of the nation. He, too, wasn't real.
In both revelations, there was an odd disappointment. The emotional connection with these children had been so strong, the obsession with their plight palpable.

But why?

Sociologists call it the "identifiable victim effect." When we're confronted with a tragedy with hundreds or thousands of victims, we often zero in on the plight of one person. It's especially true when that person's a child -- real, or imagined.
Frenzy as people are heard trapped under rubble

In 1968, economist Thomas Schelling wrote that the death of an individual, as opposed to a group, invokes "anxiety and sentiment, guilt and awe, responsibility and religion."

Yet, he continued, "most of this awesomeness disappears when we deal with statistical death."
These words became the cornerstone of the "identifiable victim effect" theory. It's based on a psychological process people employ when the suffering of many, or suffering in the abstract, becomes too hard to understand.

It's also a psychological process that activates our most basic human motivator: Emotion.
"Emotions are mechanisms that compel us to act," says Dan Ariely, an author and behavior economics expert who holds a Ph.D. in cognitive psychology. "Think of it as nature's way to get us to do something."

"And what created emotion is not statistical information about lots of people," he says. "It's the individual and the empathy we feel for them"

Children in particular are a main focus of this biological switch, because we see them as innocent.

"We can't attribute any blame to them," Ariely says. "It is a question of agency. When we have people that we think don't have agency, then we feel much worse for them and we are much more willing to do things for them."

Take Omran Daqneesh, the Syrian boy made famous in 2016 by viral footage from war-torn Aleppo. Hundreds of thousands of Syrians have died since the Syrian civil war began in 2011. Yet, the image of Omran, bloodied and dazed in the back of an ambulance, galvanized the public's interest more than any six-figure statistic could.

Often, these iconic children serve as symbols of a larger struggle -- war, immigration, natural disaster, or in the case of Ryan White, illness. Ryan was diagnosed with AIDS when he was only 13. The year was 1984, a time when HIV/AIDS was widely misunderstood and heavily stigmatized. His journey affected the public so acutely that it inspired legislation around the disease -- a moment of real social progress.

American AIDS activist Ryan White. Born with haemophilia, he accidentally contracted the AIDS virus during medical treatment. His legal struggle to continue studying at public school made national headlines.

But the intense fascination the public forms around an individual can sometimes invite a similarly disproportional response.
In 1987, "Baby Jessica" fell down a well and instantly became an American legend. Her 58-hour rescue was must-watch TV drama for millions.

There can often be an uncomfortable, reality-TV feel to these kinds of obsessions. Each time a child makes the news for an abduction or a fall down a well, the public's intense interest becomes both a byproduct of the story and a part of the story.

With Baby Jessica's rescue, the modern obsession with endangered children was born. There have been innumerable instances since then.
There's Madeline McCann, a British girl who went missing in 2007. About 800,000 kids go missing each year, according to one often-quoted stat. There's not enough emotional energy in the world to worry about each one equally. So we focus on the ones who're most readily before us.

This can lead to a disproportionate level of attention and aid.

"The kind of things that compel us to act are not necessarily the important things," Ariely says. "In cases where we ask the question of where to give money, the thing that is emotionally compelling, that will be where our focus is."

... and it explains Frida's story

It was the drama of a specific storyline that pulled people toward -- and made others skeptical of -- the story of Frida Sofia. It's no surprise the narrative was fascinating. Who wouldn't root for, pray for, hope for, a child's survival?

But as the hours wore on, the truth emerged.

The Mexican navy said it had based its information on "technical reports" and on the accounts of civilians and rescuers.

"I offer the Mexican public an apology for the information disseminated this afternoon where I affirmed that I did not have details about a supposed child survivor in this tragedy," Angel Enrique Sarmiento, deputy secretary of the Mexican navy, said.

Immediately, the conversation turned to the story of Monchito, the "ghost boy."

During the Mexico quake of 1985, Monchito's story followed a similar narrative to Frida's.
He was believed to be a 9-year-old boy trapped in the debris of a house. Civilians and rescuers fretted over his rescue, convinced by family accounts and their own senses the boy was just beyond their reach. He was never found.

According to the Spanish newspaper El Pais, a psychologist deemed the incident a product of "collective psychosis."
Crisis and chaos can often scatter reason and push us back to our more basic functions. And emotion, it seems, is the ultimate override.
 
The fingers said:
https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2017/09/21/bicyclist-says-she-didn-pull-over-for-arlington-police-bit-protest/OwSFcKpijnQzLemRKREbrL/story.html :eek:
Bicyclist says she didn’t pull over for Arlington police as a bit of a protest
By Steve Annear GLOBE STAFF  SEPTEMBER 21, 2017
A 59-year-old Belmont woman was arrested by police in Arlington this week after she failed to stop her bike at a stop sign along the Minuteman Bikeway and refused to pull over for a bike-mounted officer. She said she ignored the officer as a kind of protest.
Karen Cady-Pereira, who says her charges were later dropped, said she just wanted to get home Monday night when she slowed her bike at the Lake Street intersection before deciding to cruise right through.
“My impression that I have is the cars were already stopped because there was somebody [crossing],” she said. “I said, ‘I’m clear,’ and I went.”

But a police officer stationed on a bicycle nearby was less casual about Cady-Pereira’s traffic maneuver.
According to a police report, the officer tried to stop Cady-Pereira by stepping into her path, putting out his hand, and telling her to pull over.
The report said Cady-Pereira made eye contact with the officer before steering her bike around him, and continuing on her way. After telling Cady-Pereira a second time to pull over, the officer got on his bike and proceeded to chase her down the path.

“This officer drove next to the bicyclist and tapped her on the shoulder and stated to pull over and the bicyclist again ignored this officer’s commands,” the report said.
The chase lasted approximately 50 yards, police said, before the officer “had to drive his bicycle” in front of Cady-Pereira, cutting her off and forcing her to stop.
At that point, the officer asked Cady-Pereira if she had heard his repeated commands.
“She stated she did hear and see this officer,” the report said. “But she doesn’t think that it’s right that the police stop bicyclists and the police should stop cars not bicyclists.”

Backup was called to the scene, and Cady-Pereira was placed in handcuffs, police said. She was charged with disorderly conduct, failure to stop, and a stop sign violation, and escorted to the Arlington police station.
In a telephone interview Thursday, two days after the charges were dismissed in court, Cady-Pereira said she disobeyed the officer because she was set on her destination and felt “annoyed” that an officer tried to stop her — and then followed her — for riding through a stop sign on the path.
“I let it take over me,” she said, adding that she is more careful when traveling on main roads. “I’m also a person who has a hard time not changing direction. If I’m doing something, I have a lot of inertia.”

Cady-Pereira said when she was finally forced to stop because the officer had pulled in front of her on the path, a route she is familiar with as a daily commuter, things escalated quickly.
“I was totally out of line, but I think he overreacted,” she said. “He came after me, and he was just exploding with anger. I felt like I was on a kind of movie.”
The incident marked the second time in recent months that an Arlington police officer pursued a cyclist on the bike path who had disobeyed traffic laws, before eventually arresting the person. Charges in that case were also dropped.
Cady-Pereira was open to talking about her own situation because she believes cyclists should be treated more like pedestrians — not vehicles — when it comes to certain traffic laws. She said her choice to ignore the officer’s requests was a form of protest — albeit one she didn’t execute well.
“I would like to see the laws change. I don’t think this ‘bikes are equal to cars’ thing should stay on the books,” she said. “We need a separate set of rules. . . . There are more and more bikes out there, and the rules need to change.”
http://belmont.wickedlocal.com/news/20170922/another-cyclist-arrested-after-fleeing-arlington-traffic-stop
By Abbi Matheson
Posted Sep 22, 2017 at 2:16 PMUpdated Sep 22, 2017 at 9:35 PM
Another bicyclist was arrested on the Minuteman Bikeway for failing to stop at an intersection. On Monday, Sept. 18, 59-year-old Karen Cady-Pereira, of Belmont, was arrested for not stopping at the intersection of the bikeway and Lake Street. According to the police report, Arlington Police Department Officer Neil Simard was patrolling the bikeway around 7 p.m. that night when he observed Cady-Pereira ride through the stop sign at the Lake Street intersection.

Simard attempted to stop Cady-Pereira, both by putting up his hand and verbally telling her to stop. Cady-Pereira made eye contact with the officer and continued down the bikeway.
Simard biked after her and attempted several more times to get Cady-Pereira to pull over. Evetually, he drove his bicycle in front of hers to cut her off because of the unsafe condition that was being created along the bike path.

Cady-Pereira told Simard she both heard and saw him tell her to stop, but didn’t because she does not think it’s right that police stop bicyclists. She told Simard she felt police should stop cars, not bicyclists, according to the police report.
Cady-Pereira is charged with disorderly conduct, failure to stop and a stop sign violation.
Cycling advocate, police urge caution
“We’re out there trying to educate and get people to stop at the stop signs,” said Capt. Richard Flynn of the Arlington Police Department.
Flynn noted that both this intersection at Lake Street and another at Mill Street are problem areas for bicyclists crossings.

Earlier this summer, a bicyclist was arrested at the Mill Street intersection for failing to stop at the intersection. His case was later dismissed on court costs.
Richard Fries, executive director of the Massachusetts Bicycle Coalition, noted that many bicyclist speed through intersections without stopping assuming that they have the right of way when under Massachusetts law, they do not. Bicycle law is evolving in terms of crossings, especially on the 225 miles of bike paths Massachusetts currently has.
“When a police officer tells you to stop, stop,” said Fries. “99 out of 100 times police intervention is educational in these cases.”

When approaching these intersections, Fries noted that riders should slow down and come to as complete a stop as they can, look both ways and make eye contact with drivers. Flynn encouraged riders to actually get off their bikes and walk through the crossing, that way they do have the right of way as pedestrians.
“If I make a mistake on a bike, I get hurt,” said Fries. “If a motorist makes a mistake, I get hurt.”
 
http://usa.streetsblog.org/2017/09/25/delaware-poised-to-legalize-idaho-stop/ :D
Delaware Poised to Legalize Idaho Stop
By Angie SchmittSep 25, 2017 
Delaware Governor John Carney is expected to sign a package of bike safety bills in October that will make the First State’s legal protections for cyclists among the best in the nation.
Perhaps the most exciting of the reforms: Bicyclists would be allowed to treat stop signs as yields. That will make Delaware only the second state to legalize the Idaho Stop.
Despite a long history in Idaho, with solid safety outcomes, no other state in the nation allows cyclists to treat stop signs as yields, or red lights as stop signs. Delaware’s legislation will only apply to stop signs, and moreover, only on roads with two lanes or fewer. Bicyclists will still be required to wait at red lights. This short video, by Spencer Boomhower, is probably the best explanation for why the Idaho Stop is practical and beneficial for people on bikes.
The law will offer other benefits. It will require motorists to change lanes when passing cyclists on roads with two lanes in the same direction, or even if there are fewer lanes if there isn’t enough room to give safe distance. Otherwise drivers are required to slow down and pass with no fewer than three feet of clearance.
The law will also clarify where cyclists should ride in the roadway, in an effort to protect them from bogus tickets for not hugging the curb. It would legally prohibit motorists from honking when passing a cyclist. It would also allow Delaware DOT to operate bike-specific traffic signals.
Bike Delaware reports that the law passed with with overwhelming bipartisan support (refreshing!). Carney is expected to sign it October 5.
 
http://www.thestar.com.my/sport/cycling/2017/09/27/french-antidoping-lab-suspended-by-wada/
PARIS (Reuters) - The French anti-doping laboratory of Chatenay-Malabry, where disgraced American cyclist Lance Armstrong's samples had been tested, has been provisionally suspended by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) on Tuesday.
"This provisional suspension was imposed due to analytical issues self-reported to WADA by the laboratory," the agency said in a statement, without elaborating on the reasons why.
"The provisional suspension, which took effect on 24 September 2017, prohibits the Paris Laboratory from carrying out any anti-doping activities, including all analyses of urine and blood samples.
"The provisional suspension will remain in place pending disciplinary proceedings being carried out by an independent Disciplinary Committee."
The Chatenay-Malabry laboratory is where the urine test for the banned blood-booster EPO (erythropoietin) was developed in 1999.
In 2005, French sports newspaper L'Equipe, saying it had access to laboratory documents, reported that six of Armstrong's urine samples collected on the 1999 Tour de France showed "indisputable" traces of EPO.
Armstrong repeatedly denied the allegations before admitting to doping in a television interview in 2013.
(This version of the story corrects paragraph 2 after WADA made clear issues were 'self-reported' by laboratory)
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Christian Radnedge)
 
http://www.bicycleretailer.com/recalls/2017/09/28/brompton-recalls-bikes-over-bottom-bracket-concerns#.Wc7uDWa3PMI
Brompton recalls bikes to replace bottom bracket

Published September 28, 2017

by BRAIN Staff

LONDON (BRAIN) — Folding bike maker Brompton is recalling thousands of bikes — all bikes sold between April 2014 and May 2017 — to replace a bottom bracket that can fail.

The company announced the recall Thursday.

"Through our warranty and quality assurance process we have become aware of an issue affecting a component manufactured between April 2014 – May 2017. The axle of the third party supplied FAG Bottom Bracket has had higher than expected reported incidence of failure. Although this still meets international safety standards this does not meet the standards which Brompton sets for its components. We have therefore initiated a programme to recall all affected bikes and replace the bottom bracket cartridge with a new and tested part, free of charge to all of our affected customers," the company said.

The bikes affected have serial numbers from 1403284144 to 1705150001 and can be any Brompton model. The serial number can be found on a curved plate or silver sticker applied to the frame, as shown in the image.

On its website, the company said the incident rate for incidents involving the bottom brackets has been 0.02 percent. However the company said a failure could result injury from loss of control and from the sharp edge of a broken axle. Brompton said the failures are a result of metal fatigue so bikes that have had heavy use are at more risk of failure. 
 
https://www.wsj.com/articles/las-vegas-shooting-leaves-several-people-injured-1506927071 :cry: CBS news commentator falsly reporting that fully automatic weapons are easily obtainable at gun shows in southern states. :x
Las Vegas Shooting Leaves at Least 50 Dead, More Than 200 WoundedAuthorities shut down part of Las Vegas Strip after incident at music festival
By 
Alejandro Lazo
Updated Oct. 2, 2017 6:56 a.m. ET
At least 50 people are dead and more than 200 wounded after a shooting late Sunday at a music festival on the Las Vegas Strip.
Police said they were first alerted to reports of an incident at 10:08 p.m. and then determined there was a shooter on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino who was targeting the nearby Route 91 Harvest.........
 
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