Keep us posted.
Keep us posted.
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Since this incident happened back in November, does anyone know the outcome? Did the charges stick on the driver?
Beth
I haven't heard anything more about it. I'm guessing the guy went to the hospital (for his supposed chest pains...) and that was the end of it.
It wasn't publicized so even the victim may never know. I was hit by a car last summer and I don't know in the end what happened with her. I know she was issued with two citations at the scene. I also know she was prepared to fight at least one of them (I received a summons....), but for some reason she decided not to and canceled the court date in the end. So I don't know what happened in the end - did she just pay the ticket? did she somehow get it dropped? It would be nice if the courts kept victims informed just for peace of mind, but it doesn't happen.
"Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide
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Traffic and criminal cases are public record, and it's all online in a lot of places. If you know the defendant's name and the court where the charges were filed, you can look it up. If it's not online, if you're really interested, you can go to the clerk of court's office to find it. As the victim, you could call the prosecutor's office and ask.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
If he went to the hospital, chances are they did do a tox screen, but unfortunately it's up to the officer that shows up at the crime to decide whether or not the person should have a police hold. If they do that, an officer has to stay with the patient until they are discharged and then they go to jail. This only happens in the worst of cases though and I'm not sure how they decide. They can also give someone a ticket and court date, but not arrest them. I took care of this one patient that was drunk and went the wrong way down the 705 in tacoma, hit two cars, and all she got was a ticket and a court date. I have no sympathy for drunk drivers, and I think our state is way too easy on them. I also don't have sympathy for people that hit and run, and especially people who hit people on bikes. Unfortunately though, unless there's a police hold and an officer with a patient, we can't legally call the police to let them know a patient is being discharged, because it's against the HIPPA privacy law. I know, because I tried on the lady I described above (I was so furious I asked my charge nurse to discharge her, because ethically I didn't feel that I could)! I would think if someone who was the victim wanted to press charges, they would contact the police headquarters where the event took place, but you'd probably have to hire an attorney.
-Jessica
"Namaste, B*tches!"