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by antonkm
3009 days ago
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I think a big problem with this whole debacle is that we're discussing cameras and lighting, before discussing the actual matter: a person died and someone is responsible. It doesn't matter if I were to run someone over when it's dark. I would still be accountable. The discussion about footage removes focus from the actual issue which should be a legal issue, not a technical debugging session. Edit: Sorry, am not native English speaker. What I meant when I wrote accountable was that I would have to own up to what happened. Not that I would get a sentence if it was an accident. |
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As long as you weren't drinking or otherwise found to be obviously negligent this is typically not the case.
The interesting part of this to me is that the police are treating this as if it were a human driver and holding the car to that level of responsibility. A human driver would not be charged with anything for a typical accident like this one (hitting a pedestrian in low light conditions outside of a crosswalk on a high speed road).
The court case will happen since this is so high profile, but if an average Joe driving the exact same route home from work had hit her, it likely would not even go that far.