Video shows bystanders ignoring hit-and-run victim

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Video shows bystanders ignoring hit-and-run victim
Video shows bystanders ignoring hit-and-run victim - Yahoo! News

HARTFORD, Conn. - A 78-year-old man is tossed like a rag doll by a hit-and-run driver and lies motionless on a busy city street as car after car goes by. Pedestrians gawk but appear to do nothing. One driver stops briefly but then pulls back into traffic. A man on a scooter slowly circles the victim before zipping away.

The chilling scene — captured on video by a streetlight surveillance camera — has touched off a round of soul-searching in Hartford, with the capital city's biggest newspaper blaring "SO INHUMANE" on the front page and the police chief lamenting: "We no longer have a moral compass."

"We have no regard for each other," said Chief Daryl Roberts, who on Wednesday released the video in hopes of making an arrest in the accident that left Angel Arce Torres in critical condition.

However, Roberts and other city officials backtracked on Thursday. After initially saying he was unsure whether anyone called 911, he and other city officials appeared at a news conference in which they said that four people dialed 911 within a minute of the accident, and that Torres received medical attention shortly after that.

City Council President Calixto Torres said viewers of the 1 1/2-minute videotape might mistakenly believe that no one helped.

"I think this moved too quickly," he said. "I think it moved too quick and we were putting information out that was incomplete. What I think was missing is the fact that this happened in a very short period of time."

Roberts said his initial angry reaction was based on what he saw in the video. "The video was very graphic and sent a very bad message," the police chief said.

The hit-and-run took place in daylight last Friday at about 5:45 p.m. in a working-class neighborhood close to downtown in this city of 125,000.

In the video, Torres, a retired forklift operator, walks in the two-way street just blocks from the state Capitol after buying milk at a grocery. A tan Toyota and a dark Honda that is apparently chasing it veer across the center line, and Torres is struck by the Honda. Both cars then dart down a side street.

Nine cars pass Torres as a few people stare from the sidewalk. Some approach Torres, but no one gets any closer than a couple of yards and no one attempts to stop or divert traffic until a police cruiser responding to an unrelated call arrives on the scene after about a minute and a half.

"Like a dog they left him there," said a disgusted Jose Cordero, 37, who was with friends Thursday not far from where Torres was struck. Robert Luna, who works at a store nearby, said: "Nobody did nothing."

One witness, Bryant Hayre, told The Hartford Courant he didn't feel comfortable helping Torres, who he said was bleeding and conscious.

The accident — and bystanders' apparent callousness — dominated morning radio talk shows.

"It was one of the most despicable things I've seen by one human being to another," the Rev. Henry Brown, a community activist, said in an interview. "I don't understand the mind-set anymore. It's kind of mind-boggling. We're supposed to help each other. You see somebody fall, you want to offer a helping hand."

Gov. M. Jodi Rell said the video is "beyond chilling."

"There seems little question that the driver of the car that struck Angel Arce Torres on May 30 knew what happened," she said in a written statement. "Almost as chilling is the reaction of some passers-by who did little in the moments after the crash to assist Mr. Torres."

The victim's son, Angel Arce, begged the public for help in finding the driver.

"I want justice for my father," he said. "He's a good man. He's in pain. The family is in pain."

The hit-and-run is the second violent crime to shock Hartford this week. On Monday, former Deputy Mayor Nicholas Carbone, 71, was beaten and robbed while walking to breakfast. He remains hospitalized and faces brain surgery.

"There was a time they would have helped that man across the street. Now they mug and assault him," police chief said. "Anything goes."
 
Chief: 'We No Longer Have Moral Compass'
Chief: 'We No Longer Have Moral Compass' - Connecticut News Story - WFSB Hartford

HARTFORD, Conn. -- Hartford Police Chief Daryl Roberts questioned the city's "moral compass" a week after bystanders and drivers maneuvered around the motionless body of 78-year-old victim of a hit-and-run crash.

Angel Torres was crossing Park Street after purchasing milk from a local grocery store on Friday evening when he was struck. Police said Torres was hit by a dark Honda that was chasing a tan Toyota.

Both vehicles then fled the scene, leaving Torres lying in the roadway's lane of oncoming traffic.

Surveillance video captured the crash and the startling response of witnesses.

The video captures Torres being thrown like a rag-doll by the car, which crossed the double yellow line before hitting Torres.

Roberts said that perhaps the most shocking part of the crime is the response it garnered from bystanders.

Nearly a dozen cars are seen driving around Torres' motionless body in the minute and 30-second long video, including one that stops and turns around as it approaches him.

"No one came to his aid," Roberts said. "There were actually people looking at him … and driving away."

Numerous pedestrian bystanders are seen gawking at the scene, but doing nothing.

"At the end of the day we've got to look at ourselves and understand that our moral values have now changed," Roberts said. "We have no regard for each other."

Police said Torres was found lying in the road by an officer responding to an unrelated call. He was transported to Hartford Hospital and is paralyzed from the neck down. He remained in critical condition on Thursday.

Police released the video on Wednesday in hopes that it will help lead to an arrest.

"My father is fighting for his life," said Torres' son, Angel Arce. "I would like the public right now to help us in identifying the car and the person that did this."

Roberts said the hit-and-run is the latest in a string of incidents that show the callousness of the city.

On Monday, former Deputy Mayor Nicholas Carbone, 71, was beaten and robbed while walking to breakfast. He remains in critical condition. Read the full story

"There was a time they would have helped that man across the street. Now they mug and assault him," Roberts said. "That's not a police problem. We no longer have a moral compass. Anything goes."

Anyone with information regarding the crash is urged to contact the Hartford Police Department by dialing 860-757-4225.
 
omg! Geez, these people are really selfish! They just stand there and do nothing? Wow, nice to meet those people. That makes me really mad!
 
People simply do not want to be involved anymore due to liability issues.

I know this because my hubby does first-aid training every year and tells me of all the pros and cons. He is the type of man to go out of his way to help others and has done so a couple of times when there were some car accidents near our home.
 
It's very very very sad... :(


I can't beleive that some people have hard heart after hit and run away....


 
Saw Tv News.. Because that' area with very high crime :(:(


Long time ago ... I saw 5 adults stand on walkside and watched little girl lifeless on the road!! I was so pissed off and want going help her but cannot leave my 5 M.R. and M.I. clients :mad::cry: .... then I talked with CPR and First Aid Class about that.. They said and agree OZZIE's post>>People simply do not want to be involved anymore due to liability issues :(:(


Next day... I read the newspaper.. she died! :cry: :(:(
 
Well, some people in other post said the bystanders don't want to be involved due to liabiity issues. It's not like in the past.
 
Well, some people in other post said the bystanders don't want to be involved due to liabiity issues. It's not like in the past.
Yeah, I was thinking the same thing.

That's the sad thing about what America is getting to.

With more and more people taking advantage of the law, it makes other hesitate when it comes to doing things. :(
 
Yeah, indeed.

Too bad there aren't any many "heros" anymore. I love to hear stories about heros saving people but not in that case anymore. :(
 
Yeah, indeed.

Too bad there aren't any many "heros" anymore. I love to hear stories about heros saving people but not in that case anymore. :(
Yeah...

A man falls, isn't breathing, no medical help is nearby... so, you give him CPR. You save his life.

A month later, you get sued because your CPR possibly left him paralyzed from the waist and below.
 
Yeah...

A man falls, isn't breathing, no medical help is nearby... so, you give him CPR. You save his life.

A month later, you get sued because your CPR possibly left him paralyzed from the waist and below.

Speaking of CPR, what's the point taking CPR classes to save someone out there? I think it's really stupid to sue someone just because he/she performed CPR on the victim while the alumbance comes.
 
Speaking of CPR, what's the point taking CPR classes to save someone out there? I think it's really stupid to sue someone just because he/she performed CPR on the victim while the alumbance comes.
I agree. Even at RIT, a lot of students weren't sure if they wanted to bother learning CPR. They learned it cuz it was required in class, but not for certification. They simply "learned-&-forgot".

Nowadays, it's argued that only certified people should do it.

Yet, even if a certified person saved your life... he/she would still be sued if something else happens. :roll:
 
It's ironic that this happened in Hartford, the "insurance capitol of the world." I'm wondering if all the gawkers were lawyers for insurance companies. At least several people called 9-1-1.

But calling for help isn't enough. In Montana where I was a First Responder and here in Oregon where I'm a volunteer EMT, we are protected by The Good Sameritan Law. We cannot be sued for giving reasonable first aid at the scene of accidents.
 
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