Tag Archive for Charles Pickett Jr.

Survivor finishes the ride to mark 10th anniversary of Kalamazoo massacre, and 8 years behind bars for Point Loma DUI driver

Evidently, the concept of finishing the ride is spreading eastward.

As hard as it is to believe, it’s been ten years since the infamous Kalamazoo, Michigan massacre, when a speeding, stoned driver plowed into a group ride, killing five people and seriously injuring four others.

Now one of those injured victims, who woke up in the hospital with no memory of the crash, intends to finish the ride they all started a decade ago.

The 75-year old man now rides a bike with the names of all the victims on the crossbar of his bike. Those who survived, and those who didn’t.

The other survivors plan to join him for a ceremony on Wednesday’s 10th anniversary to remember the five riders who lost their lives, then join him to finish the ride, or meet them afterwards.

The driver, Charles Pickett Jr., was sentenced to a well-deserved 40 to 75 years in prison.

He was reportedly doing 20 miles per hour over the speed limit, and had taken a large amount of muscle relaxers and pain pills before getting behind the wheel; toxicology reports found meth, hydrocodone (aka Vicodin or Norco), tramadol, ketamine, and cyclobenzaprine, a muscle relaxant.

Pickett was convicted on all counts, including operating while intoxicated causing death, operating while intoxicated causing serious injury and second-degree murder.

He’ll be at least 90 years old before he’s eligible for release, which still seems like too soon.

The survivors turned to advocacy following the crash, successfully pushing Kalamazoo and other local town into passing a five-foot passing law, as well as convincing the state legislature to pass a hands-free law.

They’re working now to get the state to expand the definition of a vulnerable road user, which currently doesn’t include bicyclists or horse-drawn buggies.

The first formal Finish the Ride I’m aware of was in 2014, when Damian Kevitt invited the community to join him in finishing the bike ride he and his wife had started a year earlier, before he was run down by a hit-and-run driver on Zoo Drive and dragged onto the 5 Freeway.

The crash cost him his leg, and nearly his life, before he was able to free himself.

But it’s a concept I’m very familiar with.

The first ride I took when I was finally allowed back on my bike following the infamous beachfront bee incident was to go right back to the spot where I had crashed, and finish the ride I had planned to take.

Something tells me I wasn’t the first to do that.

And chances are, we’ll be far from the last.

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This is who we share the road with.

A 22-year old San Diego woman was sentenced to a well-deserved eight years and four months behind bars for a drunken crash that critically injured a five-year old girl.

The victim was riding a scooter on a bike path in the Point Loma neighborhood when Savannah Monique Taylor crashed into her, dragging the girl with her car until crashing into a steel bench.

Police found an almost empty bottle of booze inside her car.

According to the Peninsula Beacon, the victim’s father brought the girl, Olive Tomasevic, into the courtroom in a stroller so the judge could see her.

“She came close to dying several times because of the defendant’s actions,” said Alex Tomasevic. “This is what life is like for her today. She can’t walk. She can’t use the toilet. She uses diapers. She cannot eat on her own. She has a feeding tube. She can’t bathe herself. She can’t attend regular school. She can’t talk. She can’t crawl into bed…”

“I see a tenacious little girl,” said (Olive’s mother) Leeann Tomasevic. “She gets hours and hours of physical therapy. I watched the toughest of nurses cry when she was not looking.”

Taylor was ironically residing in a sober living facility at the time of the crash.

There’s no word on what she was doing driving on the bike path.

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My dad landed on Normandy Beach 82 year ago today, beginning an odyssey that would take him through France, into Belgium, skirting the Battle of Bulge and helping liberate a concentration camp, before ending the war Germany with Patton’s troops.

Then they sent him to Okinawa to prepare for D-Day Japan. He would have been one of the first to land, and was told his unit could expect 100% casualties. If the war hadn’t ended, I probably wouldn’t be here.

Although the only time he ever rode a bike in Europe, he borrowed it after getting separated from his unit.

And no, I don’t know if he ever returned it.

Bluesky post

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Giving a whole new definition to mountain biking.

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Always pull over to the side of the road if you’re falling asleep behind the wheel.

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The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.

A new protected bike lane in Philadelphia’s Old City brings out all the same complaints from the same people as every other bike lane in any other city. So if you’ve ever read a story about reactions to any new bike lane, you can probably skip this one and recite the arguments from memory.

London’s not-exactly bike-friendly Telegraph blames a new bike lane for a 500% — actually 600% — increase in serious bicycling crashes after a the two-way protected lane was installed, even though that represents a jump from just five to 30 over a five-year period. And even that is meaningless without putting it in context of the increase in ridership from the beginning of the first period to the end of the last.

A British bike rider was lucky to escape with minor injuries after he was kicked off his bike by the passenger on a passing motorcycle.

But sometimes, it’s the people on two wheels behaving badly.

A 17-year old Florida boy was hospitalized after he allegedly blew through a stop sign on his ebike and crashed to a driver’s car because he was “vibing.” Maybe they meant “vaping,” unless he was just moovin’ to the groovin’, and gettin’ into the vibes. It could happen. 

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Local 

No bias here. The Santa Clarita Signal reports a man was hospitalized following an ebike crash — but fails to mention in the headline that there was a car involved, or say anywhere that the car presumably had a driver. 

 

State

Both the San Francisco AIDS Foundation and the Los Angeles LGBT Center are disavowing any connection to a new six-day Joy Ride CA from San Francisco to Los Angeles, accusing it of riding on the popularity of the former AIDS/LifeCycle Ride.

No, a Chula Vista man riding an ebike didn’t “collide with a vehicle,” he was injured when he was struck by the motorist.

A trio of Ventura bike shops sponsored a Pride Ride in the city, with several bike routes depending on the riders bicycling skills

 

National

American Lael Wilcox is attempting to break her own record as the fastest woman to ride around the world, and set a new record as the fast human to do it by completing the ride in less than 80 days.

I want to be like him when I grow up. A 73-year old man is riding across the US to raise awareness of childhood hunger, and hopes to raise $1 million for No Kid Hungry.

Bicycling may be great for your overall health, but your bones are another matter.

Members of Seattle’s Critical Mass fanned out to set a number of informal road blocks, giving the family of a fallen bike rider room to grieve as over hundred bicyclists installed a ghost bike for the popular elementary school teacher.

A trio of Denverites raced to the city’s famed Red Rocks amphitheater by car, bikeshare and public transit; the driver won after the bikeshare bike refused to leave the city, and the transit took forever. Never mind that the public transit system bizarrely won’t be available for showtimes.

A Texas driver turned himself in for a hit-and-run crash, a day after the victim was found in a ditch after going for a bike ride the night before. Giving the driver plenty of time to sober up if he was under the influence, or come up with an excuse if he wasn’t.

An eight-year old Oklahoma boy’s mountain biking crash turned out to be a blessing in disguise when a brain scan revealed a mass in his brain, giving him a chance of survival he might not have otherwise found; video of the crash while he was riding with his dad and younger brother has been viewed over 62 million times.

Tragic news from Chicago, where a 35-year old man was killed in a dooring when someone exiting a car hit him with a car door while he was riding in a painted bike lane, and knocked him into the path of a semi truck; the victim was a planner for the city’s Complete Streets program, responsible for redesigning roads to make them safer for pedestrians, cyclists and drivers. Unfortunately, he wasn’t able to make it safer for himself.

A New York op-ed writer tries to find common ground between bike advocates and anti-ebike forces, but Streetsblog editors remain unconvinced that said common ground exists.

Trump’s plans to redevelop a popular Washington DC public golf course into an upscale “championship-level” course also threatens the city’s iconic Noon Ride, a daily bike ride that brings “wealthy riders perched on $15,000 bikes riding alongside restaurant workers just getting into the sport,” as well as federal workers, law enforcement officers, political operatives and several fitness professionals; L39ION of Los Angeles founder Justin Williams joins in when he’s in town.

Speaking of DC, 300 second graders got matching new blue bicycles after completing a bicycle safety course.

 

International

It’s easier to keep your KOM when it’s on a remote Atlantic island no one can get to without major difficulty.

I want to be like him when I grow up. An 83-year old man is attempting to ride across Canada in what’s being called the “Octogenarian Odyssey;” he’ll turn 84 before the ride is finished.

She gets it. A British Columbia woman writes that bike lanes are not a luxury, as a previous op-ed writer suggested, but a necessity for her family, who rely on bicycles for all the destinations of their daily life, from work and daycare to school, shopping and all their other activities.

An awkward Toronto intersection is being closed to motor vehicles, using diverters including flex posts, planters and Muskoka — aka Adirondack — chairs, to improve safety for bicyclists and pedestrians.

Um, no. A London borough council apologizes after saying ebikes help women “perform their traditional domestic responsibilities” and “stay looking nice.” Maybe someone can send them a link to join the current century. 

A writer the UK says he’ll skip a new shared-use pathway thanks to rippled pavement, debris from trees and difficulty accessing it without crossing a busy roadway. But other than that, it’s just fine, apparently. 

An Irish advocacy group says the problem isn’t that bike lanes are too wide, like the critics say, but that most bike lanes in the country are too narrow to safely ride side by side, as well as to meet EU standards.

The Guardian shares the best new bike and ebike trails surrounding Melbourne, Australia, for your next trip down under.

 

Competitive Cycling

UCI rules that current screens are big enough, and bans any bike computers bigger than the biggest one currently available — and you can kiss jersey pockets goodbye, too.

Sad news from New Hampshire, where American road racing and mountain bike pioneer Andy Bishop died after battling stomach cancer; Bishop competed in four editions of the Tour de France in the late ’80s and early ’90s, including for the old 7-Eleven team. He was just 61.

Apparently #1 is the #1 problem in professional cycling this year, as Pee-gate hits the women’s peloton, too.

 

Finally…

Close encounters of the bear kind — and now the coyotes are out to get us, too. Bike dates aren’t just for “Bicycle Boys” anymore.

And seriously, if you’re going to do crime, don’t ride a distinctive pink bicycle.

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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin. 

 

Morning Links: 40 years behind bars for drug-fueled Kalamazoo massacre, and new ways to drive distracted

Forty years.

That’s the minimum sentence the driver convicted of the Kalamazoo massacre will serve, after being convicted in the drug-fueled death of five bicyclists, and injuring four others.

Charles Pickett Jr. was sentenced to 40 to 75 years behind bars, meaning he’ll be at least 92 when he gets out if he serves his full sentence.

But at least Pickett said he sorry.

“I’ll live with this the rest of my life. I would give my life for the people I murdered, killed and maimed and everything else and I just want to say I’m sorry,” he said, wiping away tears.

The judge wasn’t having any of it, though.

The judge called Pickett’s apology “woefully inadequate,” saying that until that point, he didn’t appear remorseful for his actions. The judge also pointed out Pickett had many opportunities to stop driving before he hit the cyclists, but didn’t.

At least one survivor said his tearful apology was pretty underwhelming.

Yes, alcoholism and drug addiction are diseases. But driving under the influence is a choice.

One that can have devastating consequences for innocent people on the roads.

As well as the not-so-innocent people behind the wheel.

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Just what we need. Another way for people to be distracted behind the wheel.

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Local

As usual, the LA Times gets it, saying e-scooters aren’t a scourge, they’re a solution. And says Elon Musk is going to destroy Los Angeles in a dumb attempt to save it.

LA Taco looks at the arrest of Mariah Kandise Banks in the hit-and-run death of Frederick “Woon” Frazier in South LA, and the low rent attempted coverup that followed.

CiclaValley watches the Nichols Ride again, but gets some great photos in the process. And he has a good excuse for not riding.

 

State

Laguna Beach police conducted their annual Road Safety Expo to help stop bike and pedestrian deaths; they focused on the dangers of distracted driving, as well a bicycling and walking skills.

The people behind anti-road diet group Keep LA Moving continue to export their traffic safety denial program, this time taking up shop to halt safety improvements in Tustin. Credit Peter Flax with the link.

Ocean Beach planners approve a concept for parking protected bike lanes along West Point Loma Avenue.

A San Diego girl was lucky to escape with a bruised leg after she was hit by a turning car while allegedly riding salmon.

After a successful trial, NorCal’s Caltrain is expanding a program allowing bicycle riders to board bike cars first to make boarding more efficient.

Sad news from the Tahoe area, where a man was killed when a driver veered right into his bicycle.

 

National

This is who we share the roads with. A Minnesota motorist fleeing from police plowed into a playground, critically injuring two small children, as well as injuring their brother.

Akron OH looks to Copenhagen for inspiration on how to become bike friendly.

Massachusetts police can’t figure out who’s responsible for a road rage incident, so they just charge everyone (scroll down).

New York drivers can’t seem to figure out that they don’t go when the bicycle-shaped traffic signal turns green.

 

International

A film critic offers seven anecdotes marking the 15th anniversary of the bike-themed The Triplets of Belleville. And if you haven’t seen it, what the hell are you waiting for?

Talk about not getting it. Ontario, Canada police release a bike safety video, telling bicyclists to ride a far right as possible — even when there are sharrows on the street.

After a Nova Scotia man traded his car for a bicycle, he hopes a revised vehicle code will finally treat bike riders and drivers equally. And he’s not the only one.

Mikael Colville-Andersen of Copenhagenize fame does a little bicycle myth busting in the Guardian.

According to The Atlantic, bakfiets — aka cargo bikes — are the new symbol of gentrification in the Netherlands, as upscale white mothers take to two or three wheels in place of the family minivan.

Reporting from the Netherlands, People for Bikes says the Dutch ride a lot, but don’t go far.

Uber’s Jump e-bikeshare service has made its first foray into Europe, landing in Berlin following a botched entry with their carshare service.

Australian site The Conversation discusses how traffic signals are designed to favor cars and discourage walking.

 

Competitive Cycling

Canada may be getting close to legalizing marijuana, but it remains banned for cyclists under international doping rules. Seriously, has a little weed ever enhanced a cyclist’s performance? It usually has the opposite effect. Or so I’ve heard.

VeloNews recounts competitors tales from the recent 206-mile Dirty Kanza gravel race.

Twenty-seven-year old Aussie BMX champ Caroline Buchanan will compete in Texas later this month, just six months after a serious crash nearly ended her career. And her life.

 

Finally…

At least someone’s fixing potholes. Advice for your first naked bike ride.

And she didn’t just marry into royalty, she married into cycling.

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Thanks to Mark H for his generous support of this site.

Morning Links: Storm City Hall for safer streets on May 18th, and killer Kalamazoo driver convicted of murder

As the great prophet Howard Beale once said, “I’m as mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this anymore!”

And I’m willing to march on City Hall by myself if that’s what it takes.

I’ve spent the last several weeks trying, and failing, to get support from LA advocacy groups for a plan for bike riders and pedestrians to storm city hall on Bike to Work Day this month to demand safer streets.

While I understand their need for campaigns and strategic planning, too many people are dying right now. And too many city councilmembers are backing away from the promises we were made.

So if this isn’t the right time for action, when is?

As I struggled with my own anger over the recent rash of bicycling fatalities and fatal hit-and-runs, I kept coming back to the questions of if not me, then who? And if not now, when?

Do we wait until someone else dies? Or twenty more people?

Do we wait until the next road diet is cancelled by councilmembers caving to angry drivers and traffic safety deniers?

And when is the right time to demand demand safer streets? As the Chinese proverb famously says, the best time would have been 20 years ago.

The second best time is now.

It’s my intention to give the mayor and every member of the council a copy of Profiles in Courage and Do The Right Thing, and see if they get the message. If we can raise just $400 in the next week to cover the costs, I’ll do it.

Besides, we only need another $375, thanks to a donation from Douglas M to get things started.

But either way, I’m going to be there on May 18th, even if that means standing alone before the city council.

Because something needs to be done now.

I hope you’ll join me. And help spread the word, so we can get as many people as possible to show up that day.

And I hope you’ll consider making a contribution to help send a message to the council that it’s time to show a little courage and do the right thing.

Update: I’ve been reminded that the LA City Council doesn’t meet on Thursdays, so doing this on Bike to Work Day won’t work. 

The question is whether it’s better do storm city hall on Tuesday, May 15th after the Blessing of the Bicycles, Wednesday the 16th before the Ride of Silence, or Friday the 18th before Bike Night at Union Station.

So what works better for you? Let me know in the comments below.

Update 2: It looks like Friday, May 18th works for more people. So that’s the day we’re storming City Hall.

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Guilty.

In a verdict that shouldn’t surprise anyone, the driver responsible for the Kalamazoo massacre has been convicted on five counts of second degree murder for killing five bike riders in a drug-driven 2016 crash, and injuring another four.

Charles Pickett Jr. was also convicted of five counts of causing death while driving under the influence, after allegedly popping a handful of pain pills before getting behind the wheel. In addition, he had meth in his system as well as alcohol at the time of the crash.

Pickett now faces a possible life sentence when he’s sentenced next month.

A well-deserved one.

Thanks to Adam Ginsberg for the heads-up.

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This is the cost of traffic violence.

In a heartbreaking story, a writer looks at the devastating effects of a Texas hit-and-run.

Boston magazine offers an in-depth examination of the events leading up to the death of a brilliant surgeon when she was right hooked by a truck driver while riding to work. And the police investigation that went out of its way to blame the victim.

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Local

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti joined with other mayors around the world to issue a Commitment to Green and Healthy Streets, envisioning “a future where walking, cycling, and shared transport are how the majority of citizens move around our cities.” However, as Streetsblog points out, it takes more than lip service to be a climate mayor. It will be very hard for LA to live up to that commitment as long as city councilmembers are free to cancel safety and Complete Streets projects to appease angry drivers.

Streetsblog examines the dangers faced by many bike riders on the streets that go well beyond traffic safety. Like the 14-year old bike rider gunned down in a quiet Azusa neighborhood yesterday.

 

State

The Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG) will relaunch their Go Human campaign throughout their six-county region for Bike Month.

Celebrate Bike Month with ten bike trails within ten miles of Morro Bay.

 

National

NACTO presents a nationwide study of bikeshare in the US; while docked bikes outnumber dockless bikes 56% to 44%, only 4% of the actual trips are taken by dockless bikeshare. Something that’s likely to change as dockless bikeshare matures in this country.

In an absolutely brilliant move — sarcasm intendedVista Outdoor responds to the recent boycott by bike retailers over the AR-15 rifles made by one of their subsidiaries by deciding to stop selling guns. And get those darn bike people off their backs by getting rid of their bicycling equipment divisions, as well.

You can now control your LED-lighted Lumos bike helmet with your Apple watch, assuming you have either one. Or buy them both at your friendly neighborhood Apple Store if you don’t.

NPR looks at the LaneSpotter app, which allows users to flag problems with bikeways in real time, like a WAZE for bike riders.

Building bamboo bikes in Oahu.

A Portland nonprofit intends to collect 1,000 bicycles in a single day to refurbish and donate to kids in need.

A Washington sheriff’s deputy says police have to actually observe a traffic violation, such as a violation of the three-foot passing law, in order to write a ticket. Unfortunately, the law is no different here in California.

A Seattle website says the ebike craze has become a verifiable movement in the city.

A Spokane WA bike commuter compares bicyclists to the NRA, and says some bike riders in the city are just jerks. Bicyclists are human, some humans are jerks. Therefore, some bicyclists will inevitably be jerks. Just like some drivers and pedestrians. 

Forget protein bars. Austin TX bike riders get free tacos for breakfast on Bike to Work Day.

Houston residents are calling for changes after two people are killed in the same spot while riding bikes in the last two years; a crowdfunding campaign raised $15,000 to send the latest victim’s body back to India.

Evanston IL city aldermen reject a call to remove a parking-protected bike lane, after a female alderman — alderperson? — calls them “an absolute disaster at rush hour.”

Speaking of Evanston, a local man discovers how it feels when his bike has a starring role in a police chase.

New York council members call on the mayor to stop the city’s ridiculous ebike ban, and talk with the food delivery riders who use them to develop new rules.

 

International

Cycling Industry News considers why the bike industry has such a hard time catching counterfeiters. Which is why you should always buy from a reputable source; any deal that seems too good to be true probably is.

An Ottawa TV station says people are taking to bicycles and ebikes to fight rising gas prices.

Cambridge, England council candidates consider calls to ban parents from driving their kids to school. Unlike the US, where schools attempt to ban kids from biking or walking to class.

One more to add to your bike bucket list — Spain’s sun-soaked Mallorca island.

Tel Aviv, Israel opens the first velodrome in the Middle East.

Around 50 Brisbane, Australia bicyclists stage a die-in to call for better bike safety, tying up traffic during the morning rush hour. While the technique can be effective, we don’t win any friends by inconveniencing people just trying to get to work.

 

Finally…

Ten ways to tell others on the road that an angel just got its wings. Call it a secure dockless bikeshare parking spot.

And the Foos are some of us, too.

Most of them, anyway.