California prosecutors have declined to file charges against a sheriff's deputy Andrew Wood who was apparently distracted by his mobile digital computer when his patrol car drifted into the bike lane, stricking and killing a prominent entertainment attorney last year.
‘Wood briefly took his eyes away from the road, typing on his onboard computer in response to an email, precisely when the narrow roadway curved slightly to the left, causing him to inadvertently travel straight into the bike lane, immediately striking Olin.’
Found on http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2736376/Deputy-killed-former-Napster-COO-drifting-bike-lane-distracted-laptop-NOT-face-charges-answering-work-related-email.html
In mobile digital competency tests, employees are also reminded “to use caution” while operating an MDC and that “distracted driving is inherently unsafe,” according to training documents provided by the Sheriff’s Department.
Wood, who is still a deputy, transferred shortly after the incident to court services but had made the request more than a year earlier, a department spokesman has said.
http://www.dailynews.com/general-news/20140827/in-calabasas-death-of-cyclist-milton-olin-no-charges-against-typing-deputy
What does it look like for another cop that was driving and using his laptop?
Keep you eyes on where your 4000 pound killing machine is going. The life you save might be your own
One law for you, another law for them.
ReplyDeleteWell what really happened was the officer was responding to a another officer chasing a guy that stole a car on foot the subject was armed. This officer lost control of the vehicle and struck a pole he died on impact.
ReplyDeleteaccording to what online source? Provide a link and your comment stays up, don't back it up and I'll just delete your note as conjecture, and not making sense anyway, as Who was on foot? the car thief? Nope. The cop?
DeleteNope, he crashed his car... so your note needs more explanation and words to make sense and a link to a news source to validate it