Let's pursue a legal thought experiment: <br><br>Ms. Soto was in the bike lane, but bicycling instead of jogging. Same time, same evidently somnolent motorist, same outcome. Now all of us suddenly concur that the motorist is 100% responsible for her death. Why should we be so much easier on the real-world motorist simply because the victim happened to be jogging instead of cycling?<br><br>A motorist's prime directive is to avoid collisions and to "stay between the lines." Had Ms. Soto been walking or jogging in the main travel lane, I would readily accept the contributory negligence argument, but she was reportedly using what is legally supposed to be a safe haven for nonmotorized road users.<br><br>By the way, I do not think the city should be held responsible under either scenario -- to me, this is a crystal-clear case of motorist negligence. The road is not inherently dangerous, and neither is the act of jogging or cycling in the bike lane, but certain motorist behaviors
clearly are.<br><br><b><i>Abulifia <abulifia1@cox.net></i></b> wrote:<blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"> I have to believe that running westbound on the eastbound side of the <br>parkway distracted with an iPod most likely had something to do with <br>it. That particular section of Bake Parkway and North Pointe Drive in <br>Lake Forest is always bad. And at 6a.m. on a Sunday, it's no <br>different. I don't have the State Vehicle Code section at the moment, <br>but regardless of personal opinions on the level of softness the street <br>provides vs the sidewalk, the law is the law, and the Handbook clearly <br>states joggers don't belong in the bike lane. And you can bet the farm <br>that the law will factor mightily into any lawsuits filed by Ms. Soto's <br>heirs. The city of Lake Forest will not just forgive that she was in <br>the wrong and was killed as a result. The driver may
have been <br>negligent, but she shouldn't have been running in the bike lane and that <br>makes her comparatively negligent. Translation = very little settlement <br>money.<br><br></blockquote>