
On the day of the crash, a truck parked on the greenway exit. Maybe some kind of lawn maintenance crew, but the officer responding to the call didn't know what it was because it was moved before the police arrived.
My son says he put a foot down, waited for four cars to pass, and then crossed when he could barely see a car coming at the top of the hill to the left. He was in a big gear, so he was slow to start. The last thing he remembers before hitting the windshield was the sound of the car's horn.
A witness at the scene said the boy darted into the road. Based on that plus the truck that the officer didn't see, they didn't cite the driver. They couldn't ask my son what happened because he was writhing in pain on the pavement. He left in an ambulance.
The police officers didn't take any measurements or even try to estimate the driver's speed. It turns out that Raleigh Police Department only does that in the event of serious injury. My son suffered multiple breaks in his leg and shattered his shoulder. They reconstructed his injuries in surgery on Friday. He's been in inestimable pain and won't be able to return to school for the rest of this year. These were not serious enough injuries for the office to measure stopping distance or point of view.
I reached out to my community to implore local drivers to pay particular attention to pedestrian and bicycle traffic in this area, especially with the four elementary schools on the block. Even in that, some neighbors commented that it was my son's fault. He misjudged the traffic. To that, I wonder that the person driving the car, rather than take to another lane or stop, chose to honk.
People walking and people riding bikes need protection. People driving cars are given a responsibility to not hit other things, but this responsibility is failed over and over again. In an incident between a vehicle and a person not in a vehicle, the person is going to lose. In this case, my son nearly lost his life.

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