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5 Tips That Could Help You Avoid a Motorcycle Accident

(Sponsored post for our North American readers)

In the U.S., 5,286 people died from motorcycle accidents in 2016. Sadly, there is a much higher risk for fatalities in motorcycle accidents than car accidents. While there is no way to guarantee your safety on a motorcycle, there are a few things you can do to decrease your chances of an accident.

1. Use the Recommended Safety Gear

Certain places have rules mandating riders to wear protective gear on motorcycles. But even if your state does not require you to wear a helmet or other safety gear, you should. Doing so can keep you safe.

For instance, a safety vest makes you more visible to other drivers. Without one, you could go unnoticed by a driver switching lanes. But with one, you are more visible. They might see you before changing lanes or making a turn.

2. Go at a Safe Speed

If you drive too quickly, you put yourself at risk. When you speed, other drivers may not have time to react to you. You also have less control of your motorcycle. If there is a hazard in the road or a sudden traffic jam, you might not be able to stop in time.

Usually, a safe speed is the posted speed limit. But there is an exception. In bad weather, you should drive slower than usual. The roads are more dangerous, and you need to be able to stop suddenly. If you drive a safe speed, you can keep control on slippery roads or in windy conditions.

3. Remain Alert

Most people are guilty of distracted driving at some point in their life. Although the act is always dangerous, it’s even more hazardous on a motorcycle.

You need to always remain alert on your motorcycle. Sometimes, other drivers won’t see you. To avoid an accident, you must pay attention to all of the other vehicles on the road. When you pass through gaps in traffic, be on the lookout for cars changing lanes. You should also have extra caution at intersections and stop signs.

4. Stay Out of Blind Zones

If a car driver decides to change lanes, they usually look at their side and rearview mirrors. However, this doesn’t give them complete visibility. You may be in their blind zone. If you want to avoid an accident, you need to try to stay out of the blind zones of other vehicles.

To accomplish this, you should stay near the front of other vehicles. If possible, stay in another driver’s line of sight. You should also avoid riding between traffic lanes and parked vehicles. When you venture too close to a parked car, you risk a passenger opening their door and hitting you. Additionally, you risk a pedestrian stepping out in front of you.

5. Stay Up-to-Date on Maintenance

Whether you use your bike regularly or only on rare occasions, you need to stay up-to-date on your maintenance. This means keeping all of its parts in good condition. You should regularly check your brakes, lights, tires, and exhaust. If you fail to do so, a malfunction could cause you to be involved in an accident.

No matter how carefully you might drive, you could find yourself a victim of an accident. If you do, the stakes are high. You could lose your life or suffer from a permanent injury. With the help of a motorcycle accident lawyer in Miami, you can seek compensation for your injuries. You could receive money for your medical bills and more.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Rider dies in crash with turning truck

A 34-year-old male motorcycle rider has died in a crash with a truck that appears to have been turning across his path.

The accident happened about 2.15pm yesterday (7 June 2019) in Garfield Road East, Riverstone, in Sydney’s north-west.

Police have been told the motorcycle was travelling east along Garfield Road East when it collided with a Hino truck which was believed to be turning right on to Edmund Street.

The top photo shows the view the truck driver would have before turning right into Edmund St.Truck crash turning

The rider was treated by NSW Ambulance paramedics but died at the scene.

The male driver of the truck was uninjured.

Officers from Quakers Hill Police Area Command established a crime scene and commenced an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the crash.

A report will be prepared for the information of the Coroner.

Any charges arising from the incident are not expected until the Coroner concludes their report.

Our sincere condolences to the rider’s family and friends.

Common crashes

Most accidents involving motorcycles and other vehicles occur when the other vehicle is turning across their path.

The result can be lethal as the rider hits the vehicle in a t-bone fashion, rather than a glancing blow.

There are a number of scenarios of turning-vehicle crashes where the rider is completely blameless and others where they are at partial or complete fault.

But in the end, it doesn’t matter whose fault it is if the rider is dead.

These are the four most common crash situations where the other motorist is turning, often without looking for motorcycles:

  1. Oncoming driver turns across the rider’s path to enter a property or side street;
  2. Vehicle pulls out of a side street into the path of the motorcycle;
  3. Motorist pulls over to perform a u-turn without looking; and
  4. A vehicle in front suddenly turns without indicating just as a rider is overtaking them.

Look for these signs

We all know drivers don’t look for motorcyclists for a variety of reasons.

So riders need to assume the worst and look out for these signs in the above impending SMIDSY (Sorry Mate, I didn’t See You) situations:

  1. If an approaching vehicle has its indicators on, assume they may turn without giving way to you and look for movement of the wheels and the driver’s head turning;
  2. Be suspicious of all vehicles coming out of side streets (left or right) and again check their wheels and the driver’s head to see if they have seen you;
  3. Treat any vehicle that pulls over as a possible u-turn or at least that they will suddenly open their door and step out in front of you; and
  4. If the vehicle in front suddenly slows, don’t take the opportunity to pass them. Be cautious that they could be about to make a turn, even if they haven’t indicated.

How to avoid SMIDSY crashesTurning crash

In all the above four situations, slow down and be prepared to take some sort of evasive action, looking for a possible escape route.

If the driver is on a side street or oncoming, try to make eye contact with them.

Make yourself seen by moving in your lane.

You can also alert drivers to your presence by blowing your horn or flashing your lights, although these may be illegal in some jurisdictions and could give the false message that you are letting them cross your path.

Don’t trust loud pipes to save you. Most drivers have their windows up, air-conditioning on and the radio turned up loud, so they may not hear you, anyway.

Besides, in all these situations, your pipes are facing away from the driver.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Top Causes and Ways to Avoid Motorcycle Accidents

(Sponsored post for our North American readers)

Some people consider riding a motorcycle, not just a pure hobby, but  a lifestyle. Sense of adventure, excitement, and passion are some of the significant reasons why motorcycle enthusiasts ride. However, it can also be dangerous. Several factors can contribute to motorcycle accidents. And, both new and trained riders should know the common causes of this kind of accident and how they are going to avoid them. If you are among the motorcycle enthusiasts, the following information could help you on your next ride.

1.Hitting A Patch of Gravel or Sand

There are times that a rider may come across the rough patch across the road where it can cause panic as well as the loss of control over the vehicle. Tip: Give yourself a perfect time to register and then, respond to the obstacles. Make sure to have an open field of vision so that you can see your surroundings.

  1. A Car Turning Left in Front of You

Motorists may collide with your motorcycle while they are turning left around the corner and this kind of accident can be either due to the inattention of the drivers or you are in their blind spot. Tip: You can prevent this kind of collision by slowing down and gauging the other vehicle that is going to turn left. 

  1. A Car Hitting You from Behind

In a case where you are halting at an intersection or crosswalk to avoid something in front of you when a driver behind does not see you, it can result in them plowing into your bike. This kind of accident is known as “rear-ender.” Tip: make sure to slow down gradually before halting. You can also pull over to the roadside at intersections and then flash your brake lights to alert the other vehicles of your presence.

  1. Front Brake Was Locked

A cop, a deer, or a group of people suddenly appear in front of you, and you grab a fistful of your front brake. This kind of action can make your motorcycle cartwheel down the road. Tip: You need to learn how to use your front brake. Although it may be counter-intuitive, it can help you slow down much quicker than with engine braking.

  1. A Car Door Opened

A terrible motorcycle accident may occur if drivers fail to check the way is a clear before they pull out of a car park or open their door. Tip: To avoid a motorcycle accident caused by this circumstance, try to avoid riding closely to parked vehicles on a busy street. On the other hand, if it is impossible to avoid, you can ride at a regulated speed and be alert to signs of activities in parked vehicles.

A motorcycle ride can cause you incomparable excitement and happiness, but at the same time, road accidents. If you encounter these accidents, you can consult a motorcycle accident attorney to help you settle things and safely continue your lifestyle.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Will George Clooney after ride his crash?

Movie star George Clooney says he is giving motorcycling a rest after a scooter crash in Italy last year that split his helmet in half.

Clooney, along with his friend Brad Pitt, is a great lover of motorcycles. He has been photographed on a variety of bikes including BMWs, Moto Guzzis, Harleys and Triumphs.

George Clooney crash accident
Clooney riding with a friend

Even though he crashed in Sardinia in June last year, he is only now talking about the incident because he is spruiking his new Stan series Catch 22.

He has been telling various media organisations that the crash happened while he was filming the TV series.

Clooney crash

George Clooney crash accident
Clooney’s crashed scooter

Clooney says a Mercedes driver pulled out in front of his max-scooter when he was travelling at about 110km/h.

He was thrown from the scooter and the impact split his helmet in two and knocked him out of his shoes.

Now, we have two questions: What sort of helmet was it and was he wearing sneakers or elasticised boots?

We’ve seen photos of him on motorbikes and he doesn’t seem to be wearing decent motorcycle gear. Sometimes he just wears sneakers, jeans, no jacket and even no helmet!

George Clooney crash accident
At least the boots look sturdy!

That may be fine for putt-putting around Lake Como’s quaint villages where he lives.

However, if he’s travelling 110km/h on a maxi-scooter, surely he should be wearing proper motorcycle protective gear.

Set an exampleGeorge Clooney crash accident

Having celebrities riding motorcycles is great for motorcycling as it inspires people to follow suit.

But it’s not a great advertisement for motorcycling if they crash without wearing proper gear.

He needs to set an example to other riders.

It’s also not great for motorcycling when he says he may be giving up on riding.

He actually says: “If you get nine lives, I got all of them used up at once — so I can let go of motorcycle riding for a while.”

Notice he is not giving up for ever!

Hopefully, if he gets back on a motorcycle or scooter he will wear proper gear and promote the importance of wearing the correct protection.

If he’s still concerned about riding again, maybe he should read our tips for getting back in the saddle after a crash!

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Survey seeks crashed rider help

Riders who have crashed in the past decade are being invited to do a survey into rider behaviour that expands on a previous pilot study into the effects of ABS in motorcycle crashes.

Click Here to participate in the “Dynamics of Motorcycle Crashes Survey”.

Pilot study

In 2016, UK motorcycle road safety researcher Dr Elaine Hardy contacted us to attract Australian riders who had been in an ABS-equipped bike crash to participate in her pilot study.

A year later she released the results of the first real-world study of ABS effectiveness called “Effects of ABS in motorcycle crashes”.

It involved surveying 61 male riders and one female from Australia and Europe who had been riding an ABS-equipped motorcycle when they crashed.

The pilot study found that the correlation between speed and serious injuries was random and indicated that riders overwhelmingly recognised the risk of injury and thus wore protective clothing and helmets.

Now Elaine is again seeking riders from around the world to participate in her new survey.

“We don’t know if there is any difference between riders in the UK, US or Australia, which is one of the reasons for doing the survey,” she says. 

“I don’t know the most common causes of crashes for motorcyclists apart from what ever information is ‘out there’, hence the survey.”

Elaine says she will provides with a report on the study at the beginning of next year.Crash accident wreck road safety tail-gate tailgate crashed

Crashed riders’ perspective

“From a rider’s perspective, we are constantly being criticised for speeding, being risky or being responsible for our own crashes and injuries,” Elaine says.

“But we know that it’s not that simple. In fact it’s complicated and it would be really helpful to understand what happens, how it happens and why it happens.

“There are numerous factors that need to be considered in all crashes and it’s time that you the rider gave your perspective about the circumstances.”

The survey will remain live for six months and the aim is to produce a report for the beginning of 2020.

Survey analysts

Elaine says everyone in her team of investigative analysts is also a motorcyclist.

The analysts are: Stephane Espie, Research Director IFSTTAR, France; Elaine Hardy, Motorcycle Research Analyst, UK; Dimitris Margaritis, Research Associate, CERTH/HIT, Greece; James Ouellet, Hurt Report co-author, USA; and Martin Winkelbauer, Senior Researcher, KFV, Austria.

The new survey is designed to provide a better understanding of the dynamics of motorcycle crashes.

It expands on the pilot study and is provided in eight different languages: French, Swedish, Norwegian, German, Spanish, Italian, Greek and English.

The survey will be disseminated throughout Europe, the USA, Canada, Australia, South America and beyond.

“This time the survey looks at motorcycles with and without ABS in order to provide a comprehensive comparison of these braking systems,” Elaine says.

Riders are asked 39 questions divided into four sections: 1) About you and your motorcycle; 2) Background; 3) Crash Details; 4) Comments.

None of the questions is mandatory and responses are anonymous.

Click Here to participate in the “Dynamics of Motorcycle Crashes Survey”.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

What to do If You’ve Been in a Motorcycle Accident

(Contributed post)

No one ever plans to get into an accident, but unfortunately, accidents do happen and it pays to be prepared. We can’t plan on when or where an accident will occur, so it’s always wise to have an idea of what the next steps should be.

Depending on how you look at it, motorcycles are safer than cars. While motorcycles are less responsible for accidents every year, serious or fatal instances are more common than with cars.

So, what should your first and next steps be? Keep reading below to find out.

Check Yourself for Injuries

This step seems so obvious it’s almost not worth putting, but it can be a good reminder to check over yourself before you try and run after your bike or if you see your wallet thrown across the road. It’s also true if you were riding with someone else.

Remember that one time you paid attention to the airline safety video roughly five years ago? They always recommend you put the oxygen mask on you first before putting it on someone else. The same rule applies here.

Do a quick rundown and check to see if anything is broken or if you have any serious bleeding. If you don’t feel like you can walk, don’t try to walk, you may just end of hurting yourself more. Hopefully, you’ve just suffered some scratches and bruises so you can go check on a potential passenger or move onto the next steps.

Record the Scene

Eventually, you’re going to have to call your insurance company and recount what just happened. For you to get the best claim and the fairest outcome, they need to see the accident like it just happened. If you’ve got your cellphone on you, whip it out and start taking pictures.

Try to get as many pictures as you can, including a wider shot of the accident as a whole, the other vehicle, any license plate numbers before moving onto smaller areas like scratches or dents on your motorcycle. It’s better to meet with an insurance agent and have too much information instead of too little. This is especially helpful if you’re involved in some kind of hit-and-run. Don’t worry, your camera can hold thousands of pictures.

Move to Safety

If you’ve had your accident in the middle of the road, chances are lots of other cars have come to a halt because of the accident and, well, you may be blocking the road. After you’re finishing taking pictures of the scene, get your bike off the road.

It’s also important to remember that you should stay off the road. If you’re waiting on the police to investigate the scene or a family member to come to get you help, don’t try and flag them down by stepping onto the road. Just be as detailed as possible about your location and they’ll come to find you. There’s no point in risking your life again by stepping out onto the road.

Consider Getting a Lawyer

When it comes to pursuing legal action, it’s best to talk to an expert. After all, you’ve never taken your motorcycle to a mechanic who doesn’t know what they’re doing so why risk a potential case?

In this case, you’re going to want to find a lawyer that deals with personal injury. What exactly is a personal injury? The broadest term is “unintentional injury”, a physical or mental injury to an individual. The most common areas of personal injury are traffic accidents, work accidents or medical accidents.

If you were out riding by yourself, you likely won’t be able to file a lawsuit and shouldn’t contact a lawyer. If you were struck by another driver, then you’re more likely to fall into the personal injury category. This is because the other driver had a “definable duty” of safe driving they did not adhere to and caused injury to you.

Where can you go to find the right lawyer? You can always start by asking friends or family if they have had any similar experiences. If no one has, check with your state’s bar association to see a list.

It’s beneficial to find someone who has dealt with similar cases before or who, at the very least, is familiar with motorcycles. There are many different types of law, so you’ll want to make sure you’re finding someone who you know will represent you well.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Selfies the new scourge of road deaths

If you think talking or texting on a mobile phone while driving is dangerous, a new trend of taking selfies has emerged to further endanger riders’ lives.

A US study has found more than 15% of drivers say they take selfies while driving. And 5% “go live” while driving, possibly imitating James Corden’s enormously popular Carpool Karaoke.

The Simply Insurance study, based on United States Department of Transportation data and a survey of American 1430 drivers, found 88% use their phones while driving, which includes handsfree.

Phone stats

It may not be as big in Australia where it is reported that only 1.5% of Aussie drivers illegally use their phones.

However, those statistics could be much less than the reality.

In NSW, about 40,000 drivers are fined each year for illegal use of a mobile phone.

Yet in a one-month trial of just two fixed special detection cameras on the M4 motorway and Anzac Parade and one mobile device, more than 11,000 offences were recorded. (They were not fined during the trial and there was no breakdown on talking, texting or taking selfies.)

In the same month only 1999 NSW drivers received mobile phones fines.

Selfies new scourge of road deaths
Camera detects a phone offence

The trial has now moved to a pilot program ending in April with no offence notices to be issued.

The cameras will be rolled out across the state later this year.

Misdiagnosed crashes

The problem is that many of the deaths occurring from illegal mobile phone use such as selfies go unreported, are “misdiagnosed” (possibly as speeding) or are categorised as distracted driving.

The US study found one in every four car accidents was caused by texting and driving. That does not include using the phone to make a call!

We wonder how many crashes in Australia could be attributed to illegal mobile phone use if only that was a category in the statistics and properly investigated by police, rather than just added to the “speeding” column.

And don’t think Aussies aren’t doing it, even though most support the tough penalties. In the US study, 94% of drivers support a ban on texting while driving, yet 98% claim they still do it.

So drivers seem to think it’s ok, so long as they get away with it.

However, it should be noted that US phone penalties are scant and low (see details further on in this article).

Tougher penaltiesSelfies new scourge of road deaths

Motorcycle riders are particularly keen on increasing mobile phone penalties.

We are endangered by mobile phone use as motorcycles are more difficult to spot in a driver’s periphery vision when it is glued to a phone.

Drivers who illegally use a mobile phone while driving should have their licence suspended, says the Motorcycle Council of NSW chairman Steve Pearce.

NSW last year increased the penalty for illegally using a mobile phone while driving in from four to five demerit points following reports of drivers being fined for not only talking on their phones, but updating their social media profiles and taking selfies.

However, Steve says the MCCNSW believes that licence suspension for illegal mobile phone use should be mandatory.

Australian penalties

The National Transport Commission amended the Australian Road Rules to make it illegal to touch a mobile phone at any time while driving or stopped in traffic, unless it is “secured in a mounting affixed to the vehicle” or “the phone does not require the driver, at any time while using it, to press anything on the body of the phone or to otherwise manipulate any part of the body of the phone”.

Most states have adopted this ruling.

Mobile phone fines vary across the nation:

Fines around the worldselfies Vietnam - double mobile phone penalties

Fines vary around the world from no fine in many Asian countries to thousands of dollars and licence suspensions in Canada.

New Zealand has a low $80 fine which matches their low fines for speeding. Consequently 3.5% of Kiwi drivers use their phone while driving compared with the reported 1.5% in Australia.

Almost half (24) of American states have no hand-held phone ban. Some states only issue fines if the driver is in a school zone or committing some other traffic offence such as speeding. Arizona and Montana even allow drivers to text!

The toughest measures in the USA are in California. The state has a $US150 fine (about $A205) for the first offence and more than $US250 (about $A345) for a second violation and one point.

Canada has a distracted driving offence which attracts a $1000 fine and three demerit points. A second conviction could mean a fine of up to $2000 and a seven-day licence suspension. A third offence could mean a fine of up to $3000 and a 30-day suspension.

Fines in Europe vary from less than €50 (about $80) and one point in eastern Europe to €420 (about $A675) in the Netherlands and up to six points in the UK.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Police target riders on long weekend.

Victoria Police will target both road and off-road motorcyclists this Labour Day long weekend in the annual Operation Arid.

Extra police resources, including 10 more “booze and drug buses”, will be deployed in priority areas, including Wangaratta/Benalla, Yarra Ranges, Geelong/ Moorabool, Glen Eira and Greater Dandenong.

The operation runs from 12.01am tomorrow (8 March 2019) to 11.59pm Monday (11 March).

Road Policing Command Assistant Commissioner Stephen Leane says they will pay particular attention to road and off-road riders because of the record number of deaths so far this year.

Rider deaths

radio jock calls fr rider ban on highway long weekend
Rider fatality on Melbourne’s Monash Freeway last month

Up to date, 17 riders have died this year compared with seven up to the same time last year.

The five-year average is nine, according to Transport Accident Commission figures.

However, Police say they will not just target motorcyclists, but all motorists.

“We especially urge motorcyclists and country road users to do everything in their power to make themselves as safe as possible as these groups make up 80 per cent of our lives lost this year,” Assistant Commissioner Leane said.

“Please just slow down and drive to the conditions. It doesn’t take much; plan your journey, don’t drink if you’re going to drive, and take that extra few minutes to drive at a speed that is appropriate to the conditions you are travelling in.”

“All too often we accept fatal crashes as a normal thing that just happens on long weekends.

“Well I am saying one person is too many, let alone the 59 lives lost this year.

“The only acceptable number is zero, so we need the community to assist in ensuring that this weekend is safe for everyone.”

2018 long weekend Operation Arid results:

  • six lives lost
  • 3129 speeding offences
  • 441 mobile phone offences
  • 262 seat belt offences

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Unrealistic road toll targets prompt knee-jerks

Ambitious road toll targets, such as the improbable Vision Zero campaign, create unrealistic expectations that only serve to goad politicians into knee-jerk responses.

They usually consist of lower speed limits and crackdowns on motorcyclists who are over-over-represented in the statistics.

So it comes as no surprise that Australia is not on target to meet its ambitious National Road Safety Strategy road toll objective, agreed to by all state and territory governments in 2011.

AAA targets governments

The Australian Automobile Association is now putting pressure on state and federal governments to comply with 12 recommendations made in an independent inquiry into the NRSS.

They include a special federal Cabinet position for road safety, relevant bureaucratic support, government recognition of road safety and a $3 billion-a-year road safety fund.

All commendable recommendations.

However, they also ridiculously advocate Vision Zero targets by 2050.

Rider concerns

Among the 12 recommendations are two insidious references to issues that should send a shiver down the spine of many motorists, in particular motorcyclists.

One is to “implement rapid deployment and accelerated uptake of proven vehicle safety technologies and innovation”.

This could mean mandating technologies such as automatic emergency brakes in motorcycles.

It’s already being mandated in cars, so why not? After all, we already have mandatory ABS.Honda first with emergency braking

Honda and Continental AG are already working on motorcycle-based emergency brakes.

The other insidious recommendation is to “accelerate the adoption of speed management initiatives that support harm elimination”.

In other words, lower speed limits!

Recently, UNSW Sydney Professor Raphael Grzebieta was honoured with an international road safety award for his work which recognises his research into the reduction of speed limits on highways, suburban and high pedestrian active streets.

He recommends 80km/h on some highways and 30km/h in CBD streets.

Together with the AAA’s recommendation, this could be the impetus governments need to drop speeds.

Crash data

The inquiry into the NRSS does not recommend better crash data which is still largely in the hands of untrained police, rather than specific crash investigators.

Motorcycle Council of NSW (MCCNSW) chairman Steve Pearce says proper crash investigation would reveal the real causes of motorcycle crashes and help prevent further accidents and deaths.

A 2012 Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry documented the lack of reliable crash data and recommended a road crash data authority be set up independent of VicPol/VicRoads/TAC.

Motorcycle Riders Association of Victoria spokesman Damien Codognotto says that “while we base road trauma countermeasures on unreliable, inadequate crash data we will get unreliable, inadequate countermeasures”.

Crash data for motorcyclists is not as bad as many police and the mainstream media would have us believe.

The AAA’s inquiry found there were 191 motorcyclist deaths on Australian roads over the past 12 months compared with 242 the previous year which is a decrease of 21.1%.

Meanwhile, cyclist fatalities increased 80%.Cyclist video shows ‘safety in numbers’ bicycle

So rather than a crackdown on motorcyclists, let’s have a crackdown on riders who flout road rules.

And maybe the Tasmanian Motorcycle Council’s call for free identification numbers, not registration, for cyclists over 18 so they don’t escape fines is not so silly, after all.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Perth rider killed after police pursuit

A 24-year-old Perth rider has died after a woman who had been involved in a police pursuit crashed into him early Thursday morning on the wrong side of the road.

Jordan Thorsager was riding his Kawasaki on the Leach highway just after midnight when he was hit head-on by the driver.

Police say they were not pursuing the woman at the time of the crash, but confirm they had been chasing her “on and off” over the previous hour. She was wanted on an arrest warrant.

Western Australia Police Major Crash investigators and police Internal Affairs officers are investigating the pursuit and are calling for witnesses.

Surprisingly, his family is willing to forgive the driver and does not question police conduct.

 police pursuit
(Image: Channel 9 News, Perth)

Police may not have been pursuing the woman at the time of the crash, but did their pursuit over the previous hour affect the driving behaviour of the woman?

A 24-year-old man is now dead after police pursued a woman wanted on an arrest warrant for matters not made public. Does that seem like a fair outcome from a pursuit?

Police pursuit

The 2009 Australian Institute of Criminology study found the three most pressing issues for police reform around the world are use of force, policing of violence in families and high-speed pursuits.

It also found deaths in custody at police stations are declining but “deaths in custody” as a result of high-speed pursuits were rising.

While less than 1% of police pursuits results in a fatal crash, 38% of the people killed are innocent bystanders.

It’s much worse in the USA where one person dies every day as a result of a police pursuit. Of those deaths, 1% are police, 55% suspects and 44% bystanders.

Most police procedures acknowledge the judgement of the officer at the scene to begin a pursuit.

However, continuation of the pursuit is then deferred to a senior officer at the station or headquarters.

They have to make a quick judgement based on the lethal risk to the community of the chase versus the lethal risk to the community of letting a serious offender escape.

This must be backed by information, not just mere suspicion.

Queensland police figures show only about 3% of pursuits involved imminent threat to life or a suspect escaping after a homicide.

Police have a duty to not only prevent and control crime, but more importantly, they have a duty to protect the community and that includes from their own reckless behaviour and judgement.

Click her to read about a police and media pursuit that encouraged a motorcycle rider to perform stunts for the cameras.

Police pursuit pursuits
TV chopper captures pursued rider performing stunts

Restrictive practices

Despite criticism from police unions, most pursuit policies around the world, including the USA, are becoming more restrictive.

In many jurisdictions, pursuits are only allowed if there is a serious risk to public safety or in relation to a major crime involving death or injury.

However, there is an issue about making these pursuit policies public. Some say they should be public to show transparency while others believe it would give criminals clues on how to evade police.

Those who support pursuits point out that the number of people evading police is rising as a result of more restrictive pursuit policies, despite higher penalties for evading police.

Making the issue more complex is the degree of the pursuit.

Should there be an upper speed limit for police? Should police be allowed to break other road rules in the pursuit?

There have been incidences of police driving at more than 200km/h in a pursuit and on the road side of a major highway.

Another issue is whether police should be criminally culpable in the instance of a death resulting from a pursuit.

To a degree, technologies such as CTV and automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) devices, negate the need for pursuits.

VicPol gets number plate recognition police pursuit
Number plate recognition device on the roof of a patrol car

WA police have ANPR, but it is not known whether it was available in the pursuit patrol vehicle.

In some cases, APNR may actually trigger a police pursuit.

* What do you think about police pursuits? Leave your comments below.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com