Yesterday, I wrote a post-mortem for Jocelyn Lovell, whose
career was cut short when a dump truck ran him down and broke his neck. He would live the second half of his life,
which ended last Friday, as a quadriplegic.
The trauma nurse who helped to airlift him to Toronto Sunnybrook
Hospital immediately recognized him when he returned 18 months later for a
round of rehabilitation. She rushed to
his side, grasped his hand and tearfully exclaimed, "Jocelyn, we thought
you were going to die!"
Whatever miracles, whatever interventions, kept him in this world
for the next 32 years weren't forthcoming for five cyclists near Kalamazoo,
Michigan. Debra Ann ("Debbie")
Bradley, Melissa Ann Fevig-Hughes, Fred Anton (Tony) Nelson, Lorenz John
(Larry) Paulik and Suzanne Joan Sippel were all run down from behind by a blue
Chevy pickup truck.
In the minutes before the tragedy, police were seeking that
vehicle after receiving three separate calls saying that it was being driven
erratically. The driver, a 50-year-old
area resident, is in custody while authorities decide on what charges should be
filed against him. Among them might be
one for DWI, according to the latest reports available as of this writing.
One very notable aspect of this story is that the victims
were all experienced cyclists who had been riding with each other weekly for
more than a decade. Ms. Fevig-Hughes,
age 42, was the youngest of them, while Mr. Paulik, 74, was the oldest. Another
disturbing aspect of this tragedy is that it struck in daylight, on a street in
a residential area. At least one witness
tried to alert the cyclists and the driver, to no avail.
Debbie Bradley |
Four other area cyclists were injured and are
hospitalized. Jennifer Lynn Johnson is
in fair condition, while Paul Douglas Gobble, Sheila Diane Jeske and Paul Lewis
Runnels are in serious condition.
According to witnesses, these cyclists were a familiar sight
to many in the area and were known to abide by all laws, regulations and
accepted safety practices. Thus,
according to Paul Seiden, "The tragedy underscores the need for increased
awareness and re-dedication on the part of the community as a whole to the
safety of bicyclists when they're on the road." Seiden, the director of road safety for the
Kalamazoo Cycle Club, added, "In an accident like this, everybody
loses."
Larry Paulik |