Unbelievable.
Yet another person has been killed while riding a bike on the mean streets of Southern California.
And once again, a heartless coward fled the scene.
According to the San Diego Union-Tribune, an 82-year-old man was riding in the bike lane on the 4400 block of College Ave near Adelaide Ave in San Diego’s Rolando Village neighborhood, when he was run down by a driver around 2:55 pm.
The victim, who has not been publicly identified, was struck from behind when the driver made an unsafe move to the right, hitting his bicycle with the right front of her massive Cadillac SUV.
He was taken to a nearby hospital with multiple injuries, and died sometime after arrival.
At his age, he deserved far better.
The 52-year old driver fled the scene, but was arrested on suspicion of felony hit-and-run when she returned an hour later.
Anyone with information is urged to call 858/495-7800, or San Diego County Crime Stoppers at 888/580-8477.
This is at least the 61st bicycling fatality in Southern California this year, and the ninth that I’m aware of in San Diego County, including five just this month.
Twenty of those deaths have been at the hands of hit-and-run drivers.
Update: I received the following email Saturday morning; I’m withholding the sender’s name to protect her privacy.
This is the cost of traffic violence.
The article about an 82 year old bicyclist being murdered in Rolando Village on August 25th was my dear sweet church friend George.
I have known him for years.
He was STILL doing construction work and kept busy and never missed church.
At our church we all sit and eat together on Sundays after church service. I had lunch with George about 3 weeks ago.
He was telling me after 80 years old the DMV makes it hard to renew your license. That’s why he was riding his bicycle.
I am absolutely crushed to hear of his death.
Here I am up half the night thinking about him. It is 4 a.m. and I am googling articles to see what all happened. I can not believe this happened. All it takes is a few seconds and he is gone and families changed forever, including the driver’s.
George H. was the kindest man. Although the situation is maddening and disheartening, he would never want the driver to suffer for this.
I know George and knew how he was and he had a heart of gold. One time he employed a newly-made friend of mine who was homeless. The homeless man relinquished his 2 dogs to me to be able to get them off the street. When I told George about this stranger’s plight he hired the man in a blink of an eye. He was that way. A true Christian man. He will be greatly missed.
My deepest sympathy and prayers for the victim and all his loved ones.