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View Full Version : Video shows bystanders ignoring hit & run victim


Gio Takahashi
06-06-2008, 11:53
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -- A 78-year-old man is tossed like a rag doll by a hit-and-run driver and lies motionless on a busy city street as car after car goes by. Pedestrians gawk but appear to do nothing. One driver stops briefly but then pulls back into traffic. A man on a scooter slowly circles the victim before zipping away.

The chilling scene -- captured on video by a streetlight surveillance camera -- has touched off a round of soul-searching in Hartford, with the capital city's biggest newspaper blaring ''SO INHUMANE'' on the front page and the police chief lamenting: ''We no longer have a moral compass.''

''We have no regard for each other,'' said Chief Daryl Roberts, who on Wednesday released the video in hopes of making an arrest in the accident that left Angel Arce Torres in critical condition.

However, Roberts and other city officials backtracked on Thursday. After initially saying he was unsure whether anyone called 911, he and other city officials appeared at a news conference in which they said that four people dialed 911 within a minute of the accident, and that Torres received medical attention shortly after that.

City Council President Calixto Torres said viewers of the 1 1/2-minute videotape might mistakenly believe that no one helped.

''I think this moved too quickly,'' he said. ''I think it moved too quick and we were putting information out that was incomplete. What I think was missing is the fact that this happened in a very short period of time.''

Roberts said his initial angry reaction was based on what he saw in the video. ''The video was very graphic and sent a very bad message,'' the police chief said.

The hit-and-run took place in daylight last Friday at about 5:45 p.m. in a working-class neighborhood close to downtown in this city of 125,000.

In the video, Torres, a retired forklift operator, walks in the two-way street just blocks from the state Capitol after buying milk at a grocery. A tan Toyota and a dark Honda that is apparently chasing it veer across the center line, and Torres is struck by the Honda. Both cars then dart down a side street.

Nine cars pass Torres as a few people stare from the sidewalk. Some approach Torres, but no one gets any closer than a couple of yards and no one attempts to stop or divert traffic until a police cruiser responding to an unrelated call arrives on the scene after about a minute and a half.

''Like a dog they left him there,'' said a disgusted Jose Cordero, 37, who was with friends Thursday not far from where Torres was struck. Robert Luna, who works at a store nearby, said: ''Nobody did nothing.''

One witness, Bryant Hayre, told The Hartford Courant he didn't feel comfortable helping Torres, who he said was bleeding and conscious.

The accident -- and bystanders' apparent callousness -- dominated morning radio talk shows.

''It was one of the most despicable things I've seen by one human being to another,'' the Rev. Henry Brown, a community activist, said in an interview. ''I don't understand the mind-set anymore. It's kind of mind-boggling. We're supposed to help each other. You see somebody fall, you want to offer a helping hand.''

Gov. M. Jodi Rell said the video is ''beyond chilling.''

''There seems little question that the driver of the car that struck Angel Arce Torres on May 30 knew what happened,'' she said in a written statement. ''Almost as chilling is the reaction of some passers-by who did little in the moments after the crash to assist Mr. Torres.''

The victim's son, Angel Arce, begged the public for help in finding the driver.

''I want justice for my father,'' he said. ''He's a good man. He's in pain. The family is in pain.''

The hit-and-run is the second violent crime to shock Hartford this week. On Monday, former Deputy Mayor Nicholas Carbone, 71, was beaten and robbed while walking to breakfast. He remains hospitalized and faces brain surgery.

''There was a time they would have helped that man across the street. Now they mug and assault him,'' police chief said. ''Anything goes.''

source (http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Ignored-Hit-and-Run.html)

tjkitsune
06-06-2008, 13:05
People these days have accepted rudeness and the like as sociallably acceptable mannors.. Being friendly and saying "hi" to a random person or making small talk, often leads to fears, such as they might think you're going to rob them, or something else.. Just the other night at a Target, I was in the parking lot and started my car. The spot in front of me was open and an older lady in her cat was 3 spaces away. (meaning there were 2 open slots between us.) As she saw me start my car, she started inching towards me. I had planned on going forward and pulling out so I didn't have to back up. I was in the first stall in the lot too, btw. So, there I was, pulling forward, as the lady was pulling forward towards me. I was like, "Wtf?" By the time I slowly pulled half way into the parking spot in front of me, the lady was just 5 feet from my car and glaring at me. I threw my car in reverse and backed up, as she continued to inch forward. She forced me to back all the way out just so she can claim the spot I had.. Now figure that one out.. Talk about rude, huh?

Another thing is the, "It doesn't involve me. It's not my problem." scenario.. The man was hit. People had nothing to do with it, so they just stood and watched. They might not have noticed though, that there might have been people who did dial 911 right away, thus, the reason for it only being a minute and a half before officials arrived to help. It was more of a behind the scene sorta thing.. Still silly though...

SpaceProg
06-06-2008, 15:07
I saw that on O'Reilly last night. That's just plain sad, and says so much about our culture (or lack of) these days.

Abhorrent.

Detrevni
06-06-2008, 15:17
Stupid people. CONDEMNATION

Charlie
06-06-2008, 17:31
People these days have accepted rudeness and the like as sociallably acceptable mannors.. Being friendly and saying "hi" to a random person or making small talk, often leads to fears, such as they might think you're going to rob them, or something else.. Just the other night at a Target, I was in the parking lot and started my car. The spot in front of me was open and an older lady in her cat was 3 spaces away. (meaning there were 2 open slots between us.) As she saw me start my car, she started inching towards me. I had planned on going forward and pulling out so I didn't have to back up. I was in the first stall in the lot too, btw. So, there I was, pulling forward, as the lady was pulling forward towards me. I was like, "Wtf?" By the time I slowly pulled half way into the parking spot in front of me, the lady was just 5 feet from my car and glaring at me. I threw my car in reverse and backed up, as she continued to inch forward. She forced me to back all the way out just so she can claim the spot I had.. Now figure that one out.. Talk about rude, huh?

Another thing is the, "It doesn't involve me. It's not my problem." scenario.. The man was hit. People had nothing to do with it, so they just stood and watched. They might not have noticed though, that there might have been people who did dial 911 right away, thus, the reason for it only being a minute and a half before officials arrived to help. It was more of a behind the scene sorta thing.. Still silly though...

So you just let the bitch have your spot? Fuck that. I'd have left my car there, written her license number down, and reported her to someone in the store for what she did. And if any damage were caused to my vehicle, there would be a lawsuit. I'm one of the few who doesn't take that shit. I was raised better than that. No offense.

As for the old man, fuck the world. There's good people here and there, I'll accept. But fuck it all, in the general scheme of things. Everyone's out for themselves. I've said it a million times before, and THIS proves me right. >.<

Seegtease
06-06-2008, 20:24
Pathetic, a little surprising, but not much. A minute and a half is a long time.

SpaceProg
06-06-2008, 21:47
To the guy that was hurt, I'm sure it felt like an eternity and a half.

Charlie
06-06-2008, 22:43
To the guy that was hurt, I'm sure it felt like an eternity and a half.

Damn skippy. I'd be grabbing an AK if I survived that, and killing the shit out of anyone who passed me by, when it happened.

RonDo
06-11-2008, 07:48
My dad mentioned this to me and I couldn't believe it. When I finally saw...I was pissed.

Aingeleag
06-11-2008, 12:42
Though they may have felt their conscience was clean by calling 911.. that's still utterly ridiculous that no one went over to just be there with him (which I wouldn't think should have to be a big decision). It's good that they are looking for the two cars that were involved, and it's good that Mr. Torres is being looked after.. but yes, that's seriously callose if society has become this unsure/uncaring about their fellow man.

RonDo
06-11-2008, 14:06
Though they may have felt their conscience was clean by calling 911.. that's still utterly ridiculous that no one went over to just be there with him (which I wouldn't think should have to be a big decision). It's good that they are looking for the two cars that were involved, and it's good that Mr. Torres is being looked after.. but yes, that's seriously callose if society has become this unsure/uncaring about their fellow man.

From what I have read recently, this poor man is now permanently hospitalized.