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Speed limit vigilante sent to jail
A man took offense at another driver's speed and decided
to teach him a lesson by cutting him off and driving slowly. He's going to jail for the crash he caused. http://www.recordonline.com/archive/...mph-06-28.html -- John Carr ) |
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#2
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Speed limit vigilante sent to jail
John F. Carr wrote: > A man took offense at another driver's speed and decided > to teach him a lesson by cutting him off and driving slowly. > He's going to jail for the crash he caused. > > http://www.recordonline.com/archive/...mph-06-28.html This ****er gets only 30 days for PURPOSELY cutting someone off? Talk about criminal coddling! He should have been charged with 2nd degree attempted murder. |
#3
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Speed limit vigilante sent to jail
John F. Carr wrote: > A man took offense at another driver's speed and decided > to teach him a lesson by cutting him off and driving slowly. > He's going to jail for the crash he caused. > > http://www.recordonline.com/archive/...mph-06-28.html > > -- > John Carr ) Four weekends in jail and under $3K in fines? Utter and complete horse****. Now THIS is criminal coddling, to steal a phrase from troll being. nate |
#4
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Speed limit vigilante sent to jail
Arif Khokar wrote: > [follow-ups set to rec.autos.driving] > > wrote: > > > Laura Bush murdered her boy friend wrote: > > > I'm all for civilians "stopping crime" but I think so called "law > > abiding drivers" are usually just too inefficient to drive properly and > > get angry as they get proved the poor driver that they are. > > Inconsiderate and dumb drivers cause more accidents than they think > > they supposedly "prevent." > > I'd also add "considerate" drivers to the list. These drivers are the > ones who yield the right of way when they're not supposed to (like > stopping to let someone take a left turn in front ot them). Drivers > like these end up causing rear-end crashes by their unexpected stops, > and they also create clumps of traffic that make it much more difficult > for others to take turns. > > > How many times has someone refused to let you into thier lane even > > though you ssignal, etc? > > Learn to drive. A signal is not a request for someone to let you into > an adjacent lane and you don't have the right of way. It's your > responsibility to find a suitable gap, use your signal and switch lanes. > It's not up to everyone else to accomodate your lack of planning. Planning? Should you send others a weeks notice in writing? Oh my. Actually a signal IS a request, not a demand. It signals you want to or are about to change lanes. Otherwise there would be no reason to signal if there was always plenty of room. Therefore signals were developed to help make changing lanes safer. They are not meant to give inconsiderate drivers notice so they can block the car from changing lanes. However as a matter of law you do not have to let them in. I for one, always let those in who wish it. To do so otherwise risks them getting frustrated and doing things they normally would not do-this is proven. So it sounds like you refuse to let someone in, even though you know they want to change lanes. You actually speed up. Doesn't' t that tell you something about yourself? There is no law when multiple lanes merge into one while entering a bridge that every car must let every other car from a merging lane, in. Yet almost all drivers do in that circumstance as it is the considerate thing to do. The exception is people like you. |
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Speed limit vigilante sent to jail
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#7
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Speed limit vigilante sent to jail
"John F. Carr" > wrote in message ... >A man took offense at another driver's speed and decided > to teach him a lesson by cutting him off and driving slowly. > He's going to jail for the crash he caused. > > http://www.recordonline.com/archive/...mph-06-28.html > I don't get this one. I've read it carefully, twice. The speed limit was wrongfully reduced on a stretch of road, causing traffic (which doesn't change speed, ever, especially not in response to changing a sign on the side of the road) to suddenly be WAY over the speed limit, as opposed to slightly over the speed limit. Someone living on that road (coincidentally, the idiot who successfully lobbied to have the speed limit reduced) CUTS OFF another driver, deliberately. The driver who got cut off was probably doing the 85th percentile speed through the area (But now the 85th is way above the posted limit). Anyway, the driver who got cut off had his car RUN INTO by another car, and somehow that caused his car to roll over several times, resulting in serious injury to the driver who was cut off. An injury requiring surgery is pretty serious. (granted, it could have been a lot worse) At BEST, this is a airtight case of attempted vehicular homicide. It's a miracle that the driver in the car that was cut off survived this incident. Rollovers are often fatal. If I was the DA, I'd probably press for attempted murder second degree. But oddly, the vigilante was only charged with various misdemeanors. ????????????????????????????????????????? -Dave |
#8
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Speed limit vigilante sent to jail
>> >> http://www.recordonline.com/archive/...mph-06-28.html > > This ****er gets only 30 days for PURPOSELY cutting someone off? > > Talk about criminal coddling! He should have been charged with 2nd > degree attempted murder. > No ****, if you read the article carefully, you will note that there was contact between two vehicles before one of them rolled over several times, and the driver of the rollover vehicle required surgery. Sure sounds like 2nd degree attempted murder to me. -Dave |
#9
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Speed limit vigilante sent to jail
In article >,
John F. Carr > wrote: >A man took offense at another driver's speed and decided >to teach him a lesson by cutting him off and driving slowly. >He's going to jail for the crash he caused. > >http://www.recordonline.com/archive/...mph-06-28.html Here is an older story with more detail: http://www.recordonline.com/archive/...8/mknepola.htm In New York speed limits between 30 and 55 are typically based on engineering studies rather than arbitrary political decisions. It is not clear whether the 40 mile per hour speed limit in this case was justified. -- John Carr ) |
#10
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Speed limit vigilante sent to jail
> > Here is an older story with more detail: > http://www.recordonline.com/archive/...8/mknepola.htm > > In New York speed limits between 30 and 55 are typically > based on engineering studies rather than arbitrary political > decisions. It is not clear whether the 40 mile per hour > speed limit in this case was justified. > > -- > John Carr ) It's perfectly clear, the 40MPH limit is NOT justified. It was changed in response to political pressure, with no traffic engineering study. Unrelated quote from story you just posted: " Here, though, is a statement to the police from March 4, 2003, from a man from Warwick: "(He) was traveling north on Kings Highway . and came upon a vehicle that was traveling less than 25 mph. (He) said that this backed up traffic and a line of at least 10 cars behind him started flashing their headlights and beeping their horns. (He) said the driver of the vehicle going less than 25 mph then stopped his vehicle . then began to drive less than 25 mph again . then came to a complete stop . an additional two or three more times." This time, the report states, Officer Bobby Ferrara warned Nepola that these sorts of "actions could lead to a motor vehicle accident. "Thomas said that he will comply with the law and not put his safety at risk in the future," the report says. Four months later, the speed limit on this stretch of Kings Highway was dropped from 55 to 40 mph - a result in part to urging from Nepola, who, police records show, also has called in the past three or so years to complain about speeding, racing, even the plowing habits of the town's highway department. Earlier this year, though, on Jan. 11, a woman from Chester called the cops and told Officer Janice Oppmann about a car that "pulled out in front of her and stopped . then started moving very slowly and kept on stopping." Oppmann ran the plate. Nepola. " So this Nepola guy is guilty of 2nd degree attempted murder, and he's apparently a SERIAL OFFENDER. So why was he only given a slap on the wrist? Other information in the article you referenced clearly states that this perp is loaded to the gills, including several multi-million dollar mansions, one overseas. So what we have here is yet another example of how rich people are given preferential treatment. He should be in jail. Not for a few weekends, but for a few years. Oh, and he should clearly lose his NY driver's license, PERMANENTLY. If not, he's GOING TO (not guessing here) kill somebody. He damn near succeeded, after several attempts (during which, the police warned him he was likely to kill somebody, but that didn't stop him). -Dave |
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