http://www.ijreview.com/2014/08/1727...atal-accident/
Using a handheld device to text while driving is not only unsafe, but against the law in most states. So why isn’t a law enforcement officer who killed a bicyclist while he was operating a mobile device being charged in the death?
Los Angeles Daily News reports that an L.A. County Sheriff’s Deputy struck former Napster executive Milton Olin Jr., while Olin was cycling on Mulholland Highway near Calabasas. Deputy Andrew Wood had just left a call at a high school and was responding to a colleague on his mobile digital computer when his patrol car drifted into the bike lane.
“Wood entered the bicycle lane as a result of inattention caused by typing..” according to the declination letter prepared by the….District Attorney’s Office.However, a local cycling activist takes exception with the decision.
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“Since Wood was acting within the course and scope of his duties when he began to type his response, under Vehicle Code section 23123.5, he acted lawfully.”
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The law does not prohibit officers from using an electronic wireless communications device in the performance of their duties….Furthermore, prosecutors said it was “reasonable” that Wood would have felt that an immediate response was necessary so that a Calabasas deputy wouldn’t unnecessarily respond.
Eric Bruins, planning and policy director for the Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition, said….“Just because the law allows someone to do something while driving doesn’t mean they are allowed to do something unsafely while driving. Hitting someone from behind is very clear evidence that whatever was going on in that car was not safe and should have been considered negligent.”Due to the potential hazard to pedestrians, cyclists or other motorists, should law enforcement officers be required to abide by the same “hands-free” laws that civilians do?