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ABOUT THIS
FILM
From
Snopes.com
http://www.snopes.com
Claim: Video shows car striking another vehicle in an
intersection, sending the second car into a pedestrian.
Status: True.
Origins: It's a chilling scene: a video clip shows a
vehicle as it speeds through an intersection and runs
broadside into another car; a pedestrian crossing the
street breaks into a run to run to get out of the way of
the out-of-control vehicles, but the struck car rolls on
top of him. The video is all the more chilling because it
isn't a scene from a movie, nor is it the product of
special effects wizardry — it's the real thing, captured
by a red-light enforcement camera.
The accident seen in the video occurred at 12:40 p.m. on
23 May 2004 at the intersection of Third Street and Edwin
C. Moses Boulevard in Dayton, Ohio. Betty J. Hayslip, 75,
of New Lebanon, driving a PT Cruiser, ran a red light and
struck a Suburu driven by Albertina L. Walker, 41, of
Dayton. The collision caused the Subaru to roll over one
and a half times; it came to rest upside-down and in the
process crashed into pedestrian Scott Tegtmeyer, 42, of
Dayton.
Tegtmeyer, who was crossing the street in the same
direction as the PT Cruiser and had just reached the curb
on the opposite side, can be seen in the video breaking
into a desperate run as the collided vehicles bear down on
him. He could not react quickly enough, however, and the
Subaru rolled atop of him, dragging him several feet
across the intersection. Although medics who found
Tegtmeyer's bloodied body amidst a sea of broken glass
initially pronounced him dead at the scene, he began
breathing while in transit with paramedics and was fully
resuscitated by doctors. (As of 2 June 2004, Tegtmeyer was
reported as being in serious condition at Miami Valley
Hospital.)
Investigators said that at the time of the accident the
crosswalk signal was red, and therefore Tegtmeyer should
not have been crossing the street. They also reported that
Tegtmeyer miraculously escaped alive because the dent in
the side of the Subaru caused by the crash created a
hollow space that allowed the vehicle to roll over him
without crushing him to death. Neither vehicle was
carrying any passengers, and both drivers escaped with
only minor injuries.
The crash was captured by one of the automated red-light
enforcement cameras installed at a dozen intersections
around Dayton to help reduce crashes caused by drivers
running red lights. Each camera records 12-second motion
videos used to issue citations to offending motorists.
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