Wednesday 22 May 2013

Prosecutors charge motorist with negligence in death of cyclist

cycling

 A Kenosha teenager was charged Monday morning with negligent homicide a bicyclist was struck early Sunday morning on County Highway H in the Village of Pleasant Prairie.

Friends reported the victim, Devin Kunich, 22, was biking home from his job at the Bristol Renaissance Fair when he was hit about 12:30 a.m. He is the fifth cyclist struck and killed by a motor vehicle in Wisconsin since July 1.

No charges have been filed in the earlier crashes, but prosecutors in Kenosha County moved quickly to issue a felony charge against the driver involved in Kunich's death.

Quashae D. Taylor, 18, faces up to 10 years in prison and a fine of $25,000, if convicted.

According to the criminal complaint:

Taylor said she was driving home after visiting her brother in Illinois after midnight Sunday. She said that she could not see very well because of the fog and was driving about 35 mph.

Taylor said she closed her eyes for a second, which she described as a “long blink,” when she heard something hit her car and her roof. Taylor said she opened her eyes and saw that her windshield was smashed in. She began to brake, thinking she hit a deer but could not see anything. She continued to drive north on County Highway H until she reached its intersection with Wisconsin Highway 165 and called for help.

According to Taylor’s cellphone call log, she received three calls from her boyfriend. The last call came at 12:45 a.m. Taylor said she remembered someone saying “Hello” at the same time she closed her eyes.

A separate report came in about a body found on County Highway H. The body was identified as Devin J. Kunich, who was dead. A heavily damaged bike was found nearby, and had three white reflectors in the front wheel spokes and two yellow reflectors on each pedal. No other lights or reflectors were found.

An officer also found a backpack, a pair of shoes, a bicycle seat, a pair of boots, a 35 mile-per-hour speed limit sign and an MP3 player with headphones.

It appears that Kunich was riding his bicycle north when he was struck from behind by the vehicle. The area of the accident does not have streetlights.

Taylor also said she is legally blind in her left eye and suffers from cerebral palsy. She was not wearing eyeglasses or contact lenses, although she is supposed to for driving. Taylor said she lost her glasses. Taylor said she did not have anything to drink nor did she take any drugs except for Ibuprofen.

She submitted to blood-alcohol tests and the results have not been released.

64 Comments for "Prosecutors charge motorist with negligence in death of cyclist"

  1. Looking at the other four incidents, I seriously wonder why no charges have been filed in at least three of the other crashes.

    CTN29798 Aug 08, 2011 3:21 PM

  2. I wish somebody would have given Devin a ride home from work, it was 12:30 and foggy out.

    PrettyBird32 Aug 08, 2011 3:28 PM

  3. I agree that all bicycles should be required to have front and back lights, it's a safety issue, maybe the driver would have seen him, but then again it was also foggy.

    PrettyBird32 Aug 08, 2011 3:39 PM

  4. People in cars aren't allowed to listen to headphones or iPods while they are operating a motor vehicle, and neither should a bicyclist. Why can the operator of a Motor Vehicle get a ticket for impeding traffic, while a bicyclist never gets a ticket for such an offense? The state should also require all bicycles that are operated on the road to be registered and have front and back license plates, and they should all be required to have proper safety equipment such as lights

    PrettyBird32 Aug 08, 2011 3:58 PM

  5. My sympathies to the families.

    Two people made poor choices and unfortunately, two lives have been altered. Sadly, only one will have a chance to outlive the incident. Instead of pointing the finger, lets use this as a teaching moment so that it doesnt happen to anymore young people.

    LetsReason2gether Aug 08, 2011 4:00 PM

  6. @Prettybird 32 - You bring up questions that can certainly be discussed.
    Discussion creates awareness and that is a good thing for everyone who
    uses the roads.

    However, in THIS case - how would any of those things changed the
    outcome? From the information presented a person who is legally blind in
    one eye, who was not wearing her required corrective lenses was talking
    on the cell phone and had - by her own account - her eyes closed.
    Nothing you are advocating would have changed what happened to young
    Devin.

    Let's keep the focus on THIS incident. One person is dead and another
    has to cope with their trauma of killing that person. We know little or
    nothing about either of the individuals involved apart from anonymous
    posting in the comments section. Either one could be a saint or terrible
    human being. Odds are BOTH have families that love them and those
    families are likely devastated. We simply do not know.

    It is good that charges were filed to link the accident with a
    consequence. If it turns out that the limited facts reported here are in
    error or there are other circumstances the charges can be modified or
    dropped.

    The goal should be finding ways to make the roads safe and efficient for
    all users. All users have responsibilities.

    BDWIRunner Aug 08, 2011 4:11 PM

  7. Negligent driver with cerebral palsy and no contact lenses kills biker dumb enough to ride country roads after midnight in the fog.

    Yet another lose-lose car-bike accident, seemingly the 20th one this summer around here. Also last night, an Amish kid was killed in southwest Wisconsin when a driver crested a hill in the fog and rear-ended a horse-drawn buggy carrying three minors.

    Regardless of fault in any of these collisions, the biker/buggy rider etc. ALWAYS loses to the car. As I was told at a very young age and have passed along to my kids, it is better to be alive than dead and "not at fault."

    Bikers -- the roads are filled 24 hours a day with bad, drunk, distracted, texting, angry, handicapped drivers who shouldn't be on the road. That will never change, even if the death penalty is enacted for hitting a bike with your car. People will always drive like crap. Please, for your own sake, stop riding at night, even with reflectors and full safety gear. It's just plain stupidly risky.

    paul22 Aug 08, 2011 4:11 PM

  8. I encourage Su Su Sis sisint to look up the state statutes when it comes to operating a motor vehicle, or call up your local police department and ask an officer! It's illegal to wear headphones when you are operating a motor vehicle, it's fine to listen to your car stereo but you can't wear headphones. Also, impeding traffic in Wisconsin is going 15 miles or more under the speed limit, so in this case, the minimum speed that he should have been going was 21 MPH, and I highly doubt he was going at that speed.

    PrettyBird32 Aug 08, 2011 4:17 PM

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