Last night my sister told me a story of her friend/neighbor. I thought I would share it to see what you all thought of it. Here's the story:
Let's call him Bob, because I don't know his real name. He lived in Arizona with his family before moving to where my sister lives. Not long before moving, he was involved in a traffic accident with a motorcycle, and the man driving the motorcycle was killed. Apparently the road had been recently repaved and there was a lot of loose gravel on the road. He slid on the loose gravel and collided with the motorcycle. Some of the signage that should have been there to warn drivers was either not there or was not posted properly. He was driving below the speed limit. He was not assigned any fault in causing the accident. Afterward, the DA looked at the case and told Bob that everything was fine, so Bob went ahead with his already-planned move out of Arizona.
The family moved, bought a house, and began to establish their lives in their new area. This is where it gets interesting. A motorcycle-enthusiast group decided this was a good chance to make an example of someone to teach drivers they need to watch out for motorcycles. They pressured the DA to charge Bob with involuntary manslaughter, which he did. Bob was arrested and charged. Over the next year or two, Bob was in and out of court dealing with the whole thing. The first trial ended in a hung jury and a few months later the DA decided not to refile the charges.
Because Bob and his family were living in a different state, he spent a lot of time traveling back and forth. He lost three jobs in the meantime because he spent so much time away from work. They bought their home just as the real estate market was beginning to crash, so they also lost all of their equity in their home and ended up underwater on their mortgage. Between the attorney's fees, legal fees, lost jobs, housing market crash, travel costs, etc., Bob's family has been financially ruined by his ordeal. They've lost all their savings and their home and, although my sister didn't say so, I suspect they've declared bankruptcy. All this because the motorcycle-enthusiast group decided he would make a good poster child for their cause and pressured the DA to go after him.
So what do you think, does the motorcycle-enthusiast group owe him anything? Should they reimburse him for what their actions cost him? If not them, should anyone? Or, is this just one of those crappy things that happen to some people in life and it's just a matter of living--in other words it sucks, but to try to fix it would only cause more problems?
Let's call him Bob, because I don't know his real name. He lived in Arizona with his family before moving to where my sister lives. Not long before moving, he was involved in a traffic accident with a motorcycle, and the man driving the motorcycle was killed. Apparently the road had been recently repaved and there was a lot of loose gravel on the road. He slid on the loose gravel and collided with the motorcycle. Some of the signage that should have been there to warn drivers was either not there or was not posted properly. He was driving below the speed limit. He was not assigned any fault in causing the accident. Afterward, the DA looked at the case and told Bob that everything was fine, so Bob went ahead with his already-planned move out of Arizona.
The family moved, bought a house, and began to establish their lives in their new area. This is where it gets interesting. A motorcycle-enthusiast group decided this was a good chance to make an example of someone to teach drivers they need to watch out for motorcycles. They pressured the DA to charge Bob with involuntary manslaughter, which he did. Bob was arrested and charged. Over the next year or two, Bob was in and out of court dealing with the whole thing. The first trial ended in a hung jury and a few months later the DA decided not to refile the charges.
Because Bob and his family were living in a different state, he spent a lot of time traveling back and forth. He lost three jobs in the meantime because he spent so much time away from work. They bought their home just as the real estate market was beginning to crash, so they also lost all of their equity in their home and ended up underwater on their mortgage. Between the attorney's fees, legal fees, lost jobs, housing market crash, travel costs, etc., Bob's family has been financially ruined by his ordeal. They've lost all their savings and their home and, although my sister didn't say so, I suspect they've declared bankruptcy. All this because the motorcycle-enthusiast group decided he would make a good poster child for their cause and pressured the DA to go after him.
So what do you think, does the motorcycle-enthusiast group owe him anything? Should they reimburse him for what their actions cost him? If not them, should anyone? Or, is this just one of those crappy things that happen to some people in life and it's just a matter of living--in other words it sucks, but to try to fix it would only cause more problems?