Wrong.
The IPCA report states.......
The crash investigator concluded "Calculations show that any speed above 101kph may have been too fast for Mr Brown to stop his vehicle within the distance between first viewpoint and impact area.
Bearing in mind that the comment was from the police crash investigator and not the independent investigator, I read it as a comment simply designed to support the police theory that any speed over 100 kph kills.
Did you also note the part in the report that states that the estimated impact speed was between 93-99kph?
And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.
- James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.
Article is here:
http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crim...police-coverup
Specific line:
"Since the crash Lenihan had been pulled off road policing and was based in Paeroa on front-line work."
My opinion on the matter of police being human beings too and that they make mistakes:
Yes, yes they make mistakes. It's not hard to make a mistake if you are making decisions in split seconds.
Is it wrong for me to expect police to instead take time to make a well formulated decision instead of a split second reaction?
What happened:
~150km/h ute going in the other direction
Reaction in this instance:
Turn around and give chase
In MY opinion what should have happened:
Officer takes time to look around, check what blind spots may be in force, thinks about "hey, if I turned here could I definitely make it without it being a tight squeeze, and would all oncoming traffic be able to see me make this maneuver from far away, are there yellow lines that say a normal driver shouldn't make this turn, if so, can I safely do the turn, I am just a normal human after all, I'm not super human"
Could I turn after this hill, do I know this road? I maybe could still catch him if I managed to turn a bit further down, bit safer for me and maybe others.
Double yellow lines says: Do not cross here, do not pass here, do not turn here.
If you want to treat the cop as a normal human, then a normal human has been told that it is not safe to do those things here.
Thanks for the quote. He was taken off while under investigation for "dangerous driving causing death." Now that the charge has been lessened to "Careless Driving" his employers might feel inclined to reinstate him. Certainly the Police Association Director seems extremely sympathetic to Linehan
I note also "Mr Jackson said they would now discuss appealing the decision." I hope they find the resources and fortitude to do so.
Nicely put.
Imagine what the penalty would have been if the bike was an officer responding to an event, and the car was just a normal guy who needed to turn around and decided it was possible there.
What would the punishment have been? Seriously? Should the guy in this scenario have turned here? Legally no. Same with the officer though.
What was that comment even about ?
Science Is But An Organized System Of Ignorance"Pornography: The thing with billions of views that nobody watches" - WhiteManBehindADesk
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