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View Full Version : Bystanders Ignore Hit-and-Run Victim



dekmusic
06-06-2008, 07:10 AM
By STEPHEN SINGER,AP
Posted: 2008-06-06 07:09:34
Filed Under: Nation News

HARTFORD, Conn. (June 5) - A 78-year-old man is tossed like a rag doll by a hit-and-run driver and lies motionless on a busy city street as car after car goes by. Pedestrians gawk but do nothing. One driver stops briefly but then pulls back into traffic. A man on a scooter slowly circles the victim before zipping away.
The chilling scene - captured on video by a streetlight surveillance camera - has touched off a round of soul-searching in Hartford, with the capital city's biggest newspaper blaring "SO INHUMANE" on the front page and the police chief lamenting: "We no longer have a moral compass."

"We have no regard for each other," said Chief Daryl Roberts, who released the video this week in hopes of making an arrest in the daylight accident last Friday that left Angel Arce Torres in critical condition.

The hit-and-run took place about 5:45 p.m. in a working-class neighborhood close to downtown in this city of 125,000.

In the video, Torres walks in the two-way street just blocks from the state Capitol after buying milk at a grocery. A tan Toyota and a dark Honda that is apparently chasing it cross the center line, and Torres is struck by the Honda. Both cars then dart down a side street.


See How It HappenedCBSCaptured by a streetlight surveillance camera, 78-year-old Angel Arce Torres is shown here crossing a two-way street near downtown Hartford, Conn., last week.

http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/i_video/main500251.shtml?id=4157061n


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Several cars pass Torres as a few people stare from the sidewalk. Some approach Torres, but most stay put until a police cruiser responding to an unrelated call arrives on the scene after about a minute and a half.

The police chief told The Hartford Courant that he was unsure whether anyone called 911.

"Like a dog they left him there," said a disgusted Jose Cordero, 37, who was with friends Thursday not far from where Torres was struck. Robert Luna, who works at a store nearby, said: "Nobody did nothing."

One witness, Bryant Hayre, told the Courant he didn't feel comfortable helping Torres, who he said was bleeding and conscious.

The accident - and bystanders' callousness - dominated morning radio talk shows.

"It was one of the most despicable things I've seen by one human being to another," the Rev. Henry Brown, a community activist, said in an interview. "I don't understand the mind-set anymore. It's kind of mind-boggling. We're supposed to help each other. You see somebody fall, you want to offer a helping hand."

The victim's son, Angel Arce, begged the public for help in finding the driver. "My father is fighting for his life," he said.

The hit-and-run is the second violent crime to shock Hartford this week. On Monday, former Deputy Mayor Nicholas Carbone, 71, was beaten and robbed while walking to breakfast. He remains hospitalized and faces brain surgery.

"There was a time they would have helped that man across the street. Now they mug and assault him," police chief said. "Anything goes."

Councilman Matthew Ritter said police can do only so much.

"The citizens are the city," he said. "Everybody has a part to play. Call 911 and reach out."


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

dekmusic
06-06-2008, 07:28 AM
:wtf:No compassion nor Humanity

BrazenMuse
06-06-2008, 08:41 AM
It is disgusting...but I suspect people are afraid of blood these days too. How many of us would do more than make calls if we didn't have protective gear?
I've jumped out at accident scenes, after calling 911, to see if I could help. I always do. But I won't touch body fluids...

meanwhile,
I'd read a somewhat longer piece with this included:

However, Roberts and other city officials backtracked on Thursday. After initially saying he was unsure whether anyone called 911, he and other city officials appeared at a news conference in which they said that four people dialed 911 within a minute of the accident, and that Torres received medical attention shortly after that.


City Council President Calixto Torres said viewers of the 1 1/2-minute videotape might mistakenly believe that no one helped.


"I think this moved too quickly," he said. "I think it moved too quick and we were putting information out that was incomplete. What I think was missing is the fact that this happened in a very short period of time."


Roberts said his initial angry reaction was based on what he saw in the video. "The video was very graphic and sent a very bad message," the police chief said.


The hit-and-run took place in daylight last Friday at about 5:45 p.m. in a working-class neighborhood close to downtown in this city of 125,000.
In the video, Torres, a retired forklift operator, walks in the two-way street just blocks from the state Capitol after buying milk at a grocery. A tan Toyota and a dark Honda that is apparently chasing it veer across the center line, and Torres is struck by the Honda. Both cars then dart down a side street.


Nine cars pass Torres as a few people stare from the sidewalk. Some approach Torres, but no one gets any closer than a couple of yards and no one attempts to stop or divert traffic until a police cruiser responding to an unrelated call arrives on the scene after about a minute and a half.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080605/ap_on_re_us/ignored_hit_and_run

'Magic' Juan
06-06-2008, 09:27 AM
I think the very least I would do is try to block traffic and call 911 asap. As for touching the person I think Brazen has a good point. Not only that, but in this day and age where folks are ready to sue at the drop of a dime, I would not want to move the man in any way where some family member could later claim "well, had he not put his hands on him he may have had a chance to live." Very scary times we are living in.

-M J

DaveR
06-06-2008, 09:39 AM
:eek: :jpshakehead:

D_Zyre
06-06-2008, 09:46 AM
I think the very least I would do is try to block traffic and call 911 asap. As for touching the person I think Brazen has a good point. Not only that, but in this day and age where folks are ready to sue at the drop of a dime, I would not want to move the many in any way where some family member could later claim "well, had he not put his hands on him he may have had a chance to live." Very scary times we are living in.

-M J

Exactly. Back in April, I pulled over to help someone in a car accident. Even though the car was smoking a bit, it wasn't on fire or anything like that. The two guys who helped me open the door for the old lady so we could shut off the engine of the car said to me we should get her out. I was like "no, as long as this car is not on fire we do not touch her!" I had to explain to them that if she is hurt and if we move her, she can blame us for making her injuries worse and we don't want to end up with a law suit for trying to help.

You are right Juan, this is truly scary times. http://deephousepage.com/smilies/frownyes.gif

Suspended
06-06-2008, 09:49 AM
At least no-one tried to steal his shoes...now that is a blessing.

cleodine velvet jackson
06-06-2008, 10:57 AM
Eddie,

Although very sad and unfortunate, I do understand why no one helped.

david_mancuso
06-06-2008, 11:00 AM
Within one minute 4 calls were made to 911

----

btw...compare this to a story of kid I saw in the news recently that when he noticed an apartment block on fire.......he ran through the entire building screaming and pounding on every door rousing the tenants saving their lifes at no small risk to his own.

The kid was 10 or 11.

We live in interesting times.