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- From: chris@carnival.lbl.gov (Chris Moll)
- Newsgroups: rec.bicycles.misc
- Subject: Bicyclist killed in suspicious hit-run
- Followup-To: rec.bicycles.misc
- Date: 22 Jan 1993 19:36:00 GMT
- Organization: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley
- Lines: 109
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1jpib0INNlu7@overload.lbl.gov>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: carnival.lbl.gov
-
- From the San Francisco Examiner, Monday Jan 18
- -Reprinted without permission-
-
-
- Bicyclist killed in suspicious hit-run
- CHP questions driver's record
-
- By Diana Walsh
- of the Examiner Staff
-
- The woman who is believed to have plowed her Ford Escort into eight
- cyclists, killing one and critically injuring another, may have acted
- intentionally, said Highway Patrol officials.
- Because Linda Scates was convicted of trying to run down three
- pedestrians in 1987 and allegedly gunned her engine a she struck the cyclists
- Saturday, investigators believe the latest collision may not have been an
- accident.
- Scates, who allegedly fled the scene and eluded an intense ground and
- helicopter search, turned herself in Sunday night.
- "Because of her past record and because of the way this thing happened
- . . . we're not looking at this as strictly accidental," said C.W. Hubbs, CHP
- public information officer in Martinez. "Even though her car was loaded (with
- belongings), her view to the front was fine."
- Saturday's hit-and-run occurred in midafternoon on a straight stretch
- of Danville Boulevard in unincorporated Alamo. Police said the cyclists, all
- experienced riders, were pedaling two abreast in a marked bike lane, on the
- side of the two-lane roadway, when they heard a driver gun her car.
- "It was kind of like she punched it, hit them and kept on going," said
- Hubbs.
- "Everyone heard it," said 22-year-old Abel Eisentraut, who was one of
- the cyclists injured. "We thought it was just someone trying to pass us in an
- obnoxious fashion . . . but then she went right through us."
- "I thought it was intentional," added Eisentraut, who suffered only
- scrapes and bruises. "I didn't see how it couldn't have been. It was a real
- straight part of the road."
- Vladimir Nikoli Quinn, 22, was killed and six others were injured, one
- critically. After the incident Hubbs said, the 39 -year-old Scates allegedly
- sped away, abandoned her car about a mile north of the incident and
- disappeared into a wooded area.
- Assisted by bloodhounds and a helicopter, police and sheriffs deputies
- spent several hours Saturday night searching in a forested area in central
- Contra Costa County, but stopped looking when the dogs lost Scates' trail and
- night fell.
- A Walnut Creek man told CHP officer Sunday that he gave a ride to a
- woman, believed to be Scates, whom he found walking alone on an isolated road
- near the area around 10:30 Saturday night. At first the woman told the man she
- needed to get to a pay phone, but seemed nervous and within moments asked to
- be let out.
- With a warrant out for her arrest and her picture being broadcast on
- TV, Scates arrived on the doorstep of a home in Alamo Sunday night and told
- the residents she needed to talk to the police.
- "She came out of the woods, literally," said Greg Cassina, a CHP
- spokesman.
- Officers arrested her there on seven counts of felony hit and run and
- one count of vehicular manslaughter. She was booked into the county jail in
- Martinez.
- Police said they know little about Scates, except that she has worked
- as a nursing assistant. Apparently, she was in the middle of finding permanent
- housing arrangements. She had spent the last several days staying in a room in
- one of Walnut Creek's "better hotels," which police wouldn't name. Her
- parents, who live in Orinda, told police they had not seen her recently.
- Police records show she was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon
- in 1987 when she tried to run down three pedestrians in Antioch. Although a
- preliminary review indicates the incident was the result of a quarrel with
- neighbors, Hubbs said officials will not learn the full extent of her
- conviction until Department of Motor Vehicles offices reopen after the Martin
- Luther King holiday.
- They said she served time for the incident, but did not know how long
- or where she was jailed.
- The victims of this weekend's hit-and-run incident, all in their early
- 20's, were members of the Oaktown Wheelmen Club, a 10-member cycling club
- whose members pedal from 200 to 300 miles a week.
-
- Avid amateur riders
- -------------------
- Eisentraut, who is a member of the Wheelmen along with his triplet
- brothers Miles and Zachary, said in an interview Sunday that the friends met
- more than five years ago, when most of them were students at Skyline High
- Shool. All avid cyclers and part-time racers, members of the group would meet
- several times a week to take lengthy rides and train for the amateur racing
- season, which is set to begin at the end of February.
- But it was their weekend ridee which often measured up to 50 miles,
- that most members looked forward to. On Saturday, eight of the Wheelmen set
- out from Peet's Coffee in Berkeley and were into their 40th mile when they hit
- the straightaway stretch on Danvill Boulevard in Alamo. The roadway was
- seemingly quiet until the heard the loud sound of a car reving its engineā¤
- followed by th crunch of bicycles smashing against the car.
- In the 1988 Ford Escort's wake lay Quinn, who was later prenounced
- dead at Kaiser Hospital in Walnut Creek Saturday. Twenty two-year-old Dori
- Selinger was listed in critical condition Sunday night with major injuries to
- his head and legs.
- Even in a group of exceptionally dedicated cyclists Quinn stood out.
- A senior at Syracuse University in New York, Quinn decided to finish his three
- remaining course at a local college this spring to pursue his riding interests
- in the Bay Area. A double major in jounalism and French, Quinn, who was
- wearing a helmet at the time of the accident, wanted a career racing bicycles
- before takeing up a more sedentary career.
- "In cycling yoy have to have a will beyond the physical side that makes
- you push yourself enough to win," Eisentraut said. "He had a real will. It
- was a real different motivation."
- -----------------------------------------
-
- [The Eisentaut brothers are the sons of Albert Eisentraut, a well-know local
- frame builder.]
- --
- Chris Moll (510)486-7891
- ---
- A vacuum is a hell of a lot better than some of the stuff that nature
- replaces it with. -- Tenessee Williams
-