Accident at 14th and P, no injuries, cops refusing to ticket driver

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Viewing 11 posts - 1 through 11 (of 11 total)
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  • #961477
    jrenaut
    Participant

    Apparently, according to the police officer, failure to yield must be witnessed by the officer or he can’t write a ticket. My wife says a sergeant is coming, so perhaps that will improve things.

    #961475
    rcannon100
    Participant

    Take pictures. Take statements.

    Or…. walk away. The time you will lose fussing you will never recover and you will not gain anything of value. Write up what happened and contact WABA.

    #961471
    KLizotte
    Participant

    @jrenaut 43154 wrote:

    Apparently, according to the police officer, failure to yield must be witnessed by the officer or he can’t write a ticket. My wife says a sergeant is coming, so perhaps that will improve things.

    I simply don’t understand this reasoning if the cab was IN the bike lane. Moreover, if a car drives through a stop sign and hits someone does that mean he can’t be ticketed if a cop didn’t see it happen?! This is insane.

    I suspect that if the two bikes had been cars instead and hit one another then the cop would have been compelled to write a ticket.

    #961461
    creadinger
    Participant

    @KLizotte 43171 wrote:

    if a car drives through a stop sign and hits someone does that mean he can’t be ticketed if a cop didn’t see it happen?! This is insane.

    I think the gray area in this case may be that the “hit someone” part didn’t actually happen. Forcing someone to take evasive action to avoid an accident however should be something that the police can handle to the level of a minor citation. Especially when there are witnesses who can testify as to what exactly happened. Sheesh.

    I got cut off by a black prius cab on 14th street a couple of weeks ago and I had to take some evasive action to avoid any contact. For cab drivers though that’s just how the game is played. Pricks.

    #961459
    fuzzy
    Participant

    @KLizotte 43171 wrote:

    I simply don’t understand this reasoning if the cab was IN the bike lane. Moreover, if a car drives through a stop sign and hits someone does that mean he can’t be ticketed if a cop didn’t see it happen?! This is insane.

    I suspect that if the two bikes had been cars instead and hit one another then the cop would have been compelled to write a ticket.

    If the vehicle committing the moving violation hits something/someone then the driver can be ticketed. In your scenario the cab would be ticketed.

    The bicyclers, if there is enough damage where something needs to be fixed or someone administered medical treatment at an expense, may sue the cabbie in small claims court.

    In the end, even if the cabbie was ticketed it does not mean anything until the party that suffers the loss initiates something in small claims court. If the police write a ticket you don’t magically get money or compensation, you must jump through the hoops in court- unfortunately DC court…

    #961458
    KLizotte
    Participant

    @fuzzy 43180 wrote:

    In the end, even if the cabbie was ticketed it does not mean anything until the party that suffers the loss initiates something in small claims court. If the police write a ticket you don’t magically get money or compensation, you must jump through the hoops in court- unfortunately DC court…

    But wouldn’t there be some sort of fine associated with a ticket? Do tickets get reported to insurance companies? At a minimum, there should at least be an official record of the incident so these things can be tracked. I would hope that if a cabbie gets xx tickets he loses his taxi license at a minimum.

    #961453
    fuzzy
    Participant

    @KLizotte 43184 wrote:

    But wouldn’t there be some sort of fine associated with a ticket? Do tickets get reported to insurance companies? At a minimum, there should at least be an official record of the incident so these things can be tracked. I would hope that if a cabbie gets xx tickets he loses his taxi license at a minimum.

    No, it takes more than a minor accident for a cab to loose its hack license. The ticket is the fine, no other fines penalties.

    But you can always file a complaint with the DC taxi cab commission- you need the cab number, tag number and company name. That wont do much either, but that would be on file and if the cab does something else, more serious that initiates inquires there will be a record of the company/operator driving like an $ss

    #961454
    jabberwocky
    Participant

    I’d personally get up, give the cab a few solid kicks (maybe snap the mirror off, depending how pissed I was) and get on with my day.

    #961385
    jrenaut
    Participant

    Greater Greater Washington picked up this post (and misspelled my name), and there’s a (mostly) good discussion in the comments, including from someone claiming to be a DC police officer explaining the law and saying that the officers on scene were wrong.

    #961381
    bobco85
    Participant

    @jrenaut 43263 wrote:

    Greater Greater Washington picked up this post (and misspelled my name), and there’s a (mostly) good discussion in the comments, including from someone claiming to be a DC police officer explaining the law and saying that the officers on scene were wrong.

    After reading the GGW article with the full story, it now appears there are two parties at fault for this incident: 1) the taxi driver and 2) the second cyclist.

    The taxi driver should have gotten a ticket for pulling into the bike lane without yielding to traffic (the cyclists in this case).

    The second cyclist was at fault (and sadly got injured and damaged their bike) because they were following the first cyclist too closely in order to be able to safely stop.

    I think that everyone is focusing on the taxi driver and forgetting the involvement of the second cyclist in this situation. The accident would never have happened if either the taxi driver or second cyclist made a smarter decision.

    #961378
    jrenaut
    Participant

    I agree that the second cyclist is partially at fault, though the accident wouldn’t have happened without the combination of her actions and the cab driver’s.

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