Slashdot Mirror


Driver Sued For Updating Facebook In Fatal Crash

An anonymous reader writes "21-year-old Chicago motorist Araceli Beas has been accused of attempting to update her Facebook page on her cell phone when she allegedly struck and killed 70-year-old Raymond Veloz. The victim's daughter, Regina Cabrales, has filed a wrongful death lawsuit in Cook County Circuit Court, asking for an unspecified amount of money. Cabrales alleges in her suit that Beas operated her vehicle without keeping a proper and sufficient focus, drove while using an electronic communication device, and failed to slow down to avoid an accident. As proof, she points to the fact that Beas' Facebook page showed an update posted at 7:54 AM on December 7, 2010, which is the same time that Veloz's cell phone records showed a call being made to 911."

7 of 365 comments (clear)

  1. Whoooops by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since driving and using a cell phone at the same time are illegal in the city of Chicago, having evidence that the driver was doing so at the time of the accident means the defendant has a rough day in court ahead.

    --
    No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
  2. Re:May as well... by Anrego · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Totally agree if she did it.

    When driving a big heavy thing that can easily kill people.. if you don't have the decency to pay attention, then when you do kill someone the penalty should be much steeper than a fine and/or slap on the wrist.

    That said, I'd say there are enough questions here that it's 50/50 whether she is guilty or not. Luckily that's what investigations and trials are for.

  3. Re:Same time? by xerio · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The 911 call was about a minor accident the victim had BEFORE she hit him. He was calling 911 about the first accident when she struck him.

  4. Re:Same time? by Nadaka · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Does it really matter if she had 2 seconds to regain her focus on the road after composing and submitting a facebook post? She was still driving recklessly by posting to facebook while driving.

  5. Re:Might not be entirely the driver's fault. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So apparently in Chicago when drivers can't see what is ahead of them, they continue forward at full speed?

  6. Re:Deterrent by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A few public executions would very likely reduce the number of fools that use smartphones while driving

    I strongly doubt it. Even for the person causing them, car accidents are risky and expensive. Even hitting a pedestrian will probably involve getting a face full of airbag, a bumper replacement, and whatever re-fit is necessary to get the airbag system re-armed. Collision with a more solid object can easily result in serious injury or death, as well as a totalled vehicle.

    Even without legal intervention, spikes in insurance rates, and the like, causing a car accident is, a nontrivial percentage of the time, something that carries an automatic punishment with it. Once you add insurance companies, healthcare hassles, and vehicular manslaughter charges, the odds get worse.

    If all that doesn't dissuade the dumbasses from keeping their eyes on their toys rather than the road, I'm not thinking that remote odds of execution would...

  7. Cant tell without the time of the accident by itsdapead · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He was calling 911 about the first accident when she struck him.

    Classic bit of false inference.

    Assuming the phone times were accurate and in sync (big assumption), someone was calling 911 on the victim's phone at the same time as she hit "submit" on her Facebook upgrade. That this was the victim reporting the first accident is a reasonable surmise, but there's no evidence of this. Nor is it stated anywhere that the victim was on the phone at the time of the second accident.

    The critical bit of missing information is the precise time of the second accident. If you read TFA-within-TFA this is given as "about 8:00".

    So even if the timings are in sync and "about 8:00" was precise, the defendant could reasonably have finished Facebooking 6 minutes before the fatal accident. That sounds like enough time to be parked up, put down your phone, pull out and drive 2 miles. Even easier if "about 8:00" means "8:05" or "8:10".

    Its really not worth delving into the details of when the calls/postings were made unless the time of the accident can be pinpointed with comparable accuracy (unless you plan on baffling a jury with bullshit).

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.