Husband booked after pothole kills wife
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Husband booked after pothole kills wife
what are the rules regarding helmets for pillion riders?
here, in case of an accident, or even otherwise, if the passenger in the car is not wearing a seat belt and is an adult with a license of their own, then it's their fault, not the driver's. But if they are minors, then it's the driver's fault.
maybe the riders should start wearing helmets and seat belts, and in case of an accident and slightest of injuries, start suing the establishment left and right. God knows how long those cases will last, but hopefully, better laws and maintenance will come about then. Eventually people will begin suing for all the wrong reasons, but by then hopefully it will become a first world problem.
http://www.bangaloremirror.com/bangalore/cover-story/Husband-booked-after-pothole-kills-wife/articleshow/49018503.cms
In a bizarre turn of events, cops decided to book the man who is in mourning after his wife, who was pillion on the bike he was riding, died because of a pothole on the ORR flyover near Marathalli on Thursday. The case against himis 'death by negligence' even as authorities go scot-free mishap after mishap
A pothole has turned killer again late Thursday night. A techie riding his two-wheeler with his software engineer wife sitting pillion, failed to negotiate a huge pothole, skidded, and fell. His 25-year-old wife Stuti Pandey Tripathi slammed her head on the road. She died an hour later.
However, although it is clear that the pothole was the killer in this case - as in many other cases before this - they do not fall under the jurisdiction of the traffic police, who, going by the book, have registered a case against Stuti's grieving husband, Om Prakash Tripathi, for causing her death due to negligent riding! The traffic police found that Tripathi was not under the influence of alcohol.
Interestingly, the Devarabeesanahalli flyover on Outer Ring Road has a notorious reputation for being a death-trap. A little over a year ago - on September 3, 2014 - an accident left cab driver Shivu and his passenger, a techie named Ravindran dead.
The latter's wife was seriously injured. The speeding vehicle had rammed into the central median between the base of the flyover and the service road. However, in recording a first of its kind case, the traffic police booked two BDA engineers for the deaths as it was their alleged negligence in failing to install adequate signs and reflectors that was understood to have led to the mishap.
Even three weeks ago, the death of nine-year-old Likith Gowda and his mother Sunitha Gowda, while trying to avoid a gaping pothole on Tumkur Road, saw the traffic police booking a case against the Navayuga engineer-in-charge of Tumkur Road for poor maintenance of the national highway.
While National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), Bangalore Development Authority (BDA), Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), and Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) engineers have been held accountable for past accidents said to have been caused due to poor maintenance by the respective authorities, Tripathi finds himself not just bereaved for the loss of his wife, but also booked for her death.
Initially, a case of unnatural death was registered by the Old Airport Road traffic police. But by Friday night, they received instructions from additional commissioner of police (traffic) MA Saleem to take up a case of death due to negligence against the rider - Stuti's husband.
"I have instructed my officers to take up a case under section 304A as it was the rider's negligence which led to the accident. As for the pothole, I have conveyed clear instructions for my men to examine and prepare a comprehensive report about how dangerous it is; and whether or not they had sent any letters or notices to the BDA to repair that stretch of the road in the recent past," Saleem told Mirror.
A detailed examination and report of the pothole in question is being prepared by the traffic police to be submitted to the top brass, based on which a decision will%be taken whether or not the BDA engineer in-charge would also be booked for Stuti's death.
FESTIVAL TURNED TRAGIC FOR COUPLE
The pomp and festivities of Ganesha Chaturthi ended on a tragic note indeed for a young, bike-borne couple returning home after celebrating the festival as the rider's attempt to avoid a pothole on the Devarabeesanahalli flyover caused the bike to skid and the woman to fall off; she sustained grave head injuries and died an hour later.
This time, the victim was 25-year-old Stuti Tripathi Pandey, a software engineer with an IT giant in Yemalur. Her husband, Tripathi, 28, is an employee of a private tech firm in Bannerghatta.
The couple hail from Satna district in Madhya Pradesh. They got married on May 19, 2013. Residents of Teacher's Colony in Banashankari II stage, they were returning home after celebrate Ganesha Chaturthi and having dinner at a friend's place in Marathalli on Thursday evening.
They set off at around 9.15 pm for home on their Honda Activa (KA-05-JH-1913) when the fatal accident occurred. As they got on the Devarabeesanahalli flyover on Outer Ring Road, Tripathi saw the huge pothole and tried to avoid it by applying the brakes. But he lost control of the two-wheeler and the couple fell down. Stuti, who was seated sideways as she was wearing a sari, slammed her head directly on the ground, sustaining fatal head injuries, while her husband Tripathi escaped with minor bruises.
The victims were rushed to Sakra World Hospital by passers-by, where Stuti breathed her last around 10.27 pm.
Officials said Tripathi had been wearing a helmet, but Stuti was not. The deceased's body was sent to Bowring Hospital mortuary for post-mortem examination, following which it was handed over to relatives and friends for the last rites.
Is lack of coordination to blame for these deaths?
From cavernous potholes and craters to sudden depressions, badly-paved stretches to almost entirely unnavigable roads, Bengaluru has them all. The blame-game between the city's traffic police and various civic bodies like the BBMP, BDA, and NHAI continues as more and more lives are lost due to bad roads and officials' apathy; or due to rash and negligent driving by careless motorists.
here, in case of an accident, or even otherwise, if the passenger in the car is not wearing a seat belt and is an adult with a license of their own, then it's their fault, not the driver's. But if they are minors, then it's the driver's fault.
maybe the riders should start wearing helmets and seat belts, and in case of an accident and slightest of injuries, start suing the establishment left and right. God knows how long those cases will last, but hopefully, better laws and maintenance will come about then. Eventually people will begin suing for all the wrong reasons, but by then hopefully it will become a first world problem.
http://www.bangaloremirror.com/bangalore/cover-story/Husband-booked-after-pothole-kills-wife/articleshow/49018503.cms
In a bizarre turn of events, cops decided to book the man who is in mourning after his wife, who was pillion on the bike he was riding, died because of a pothole on the ORR flyover near Marathalli on Thursday. The case against himis 'death by negligence' even as authorities go scot-free mishap after mishap
A pothole has turned killer again late Thursday night. A techie riding his two-wheeler with his software engineer wife sitting pillion, failed to negotiate a huge pothole, skidded, and fell. His 25-year-old wife Stuti Pandey Tripathi slammed her head on the road. She died an hour later.
However, although it is clear that the pothole was the killer in this case - as in many other cases before this - they do not fall under the jurisdiction of the traffic police, who, going by the book, have registered a case against Stuti's grieving husband, Om Prakash Tripathi, for causing her death due to negligent riding! The traffic police found that Tripathi was not under the influence of alcohol.
Interestingly, the Devarabeesanahalli flyover on Outer Ring Road has a notorious reputation for being a death-trap. A little over a year ago - on September 3, 2014 - an accident left cab driver Shivu and his passenger, a techie named Ravindran dead.
The latter's wife was seriously injured. The speeding vehicle had rammed into the central median between the base of the flyover and the service road. However, in recording a first of its kind case, the traffic police booked two BDA engineers for the deaths as it was their alleged negligence in failing to install adequate signs and reflectors that was understood to have led to the mishap.
Even three weeks ago, the death of nine-year-old Likith Gowda and his mother Sunitha Gowda, while trying to avoid a gaping pothole on Tumkur Road, saw the traffic police booking a case against the Navayuga engineer-in-charge of Tumkur Road for poor maintenance of the national highway.
While National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), Bangalore Development Authority (BDA), Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), and Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) engineers have been held accountable for past accidents said to have been caused due to poor maintenance by the respective authorities, Tripathi finds himself not just bereaved for the loss of his wife, but also booked for her death.
Initially, a case of unnatural death was registered by the Old Airport Road traffic police. But by Friday night, they received instructions from additional commissioner of police (traffic) MA Saleem to take up a case of death due to negligence against the rider - Stuti's husband.
"I have instructed my officers to take up a case under section 304A as it was the rider's negligence which led to the accident. As for the pothole, I have conveyed clear instructions for my men to examine and prepare a comprehensive report about how dangerous it is; and whether or not they had sent any letters or notices to the BDA to repair that stretch of the road in the recent past," Saleem told Mirror.
A detailed examination and report of the pothole in question is being prepared by the traffic police to be submitted to the top brass, based on which a decision will%be taken whether or not the BDA engineer in-charge would also be booked for Stuti's death.
FESTIVAL TURNED TRAGIC FOR COUPLE
The pomp and festivities of Ganesha Chaturthi ended on a tragic note indeed for a young, bike-borne couple returning home after celebrating the festival as the rider's attempt to avoid a pothole on the Devarabeesanahalli flyover caused the bike to skid and the woman to fall off; she sustained grave head injuries and died an hour later.
This time, the victim was 25-year-old Stuti Tripathi Pandey, a software engineer with an IT giant in Yemalur. Her husband, Tripathi, 28, is an employee of a private tech firm in Bannerghatta.
The couple hail from Satna district in Madhya Pradesh. They got married on May 19, 2013. Residents of Teacher's Colony in Banashankari II stage, they were returning home after celebrate Ganesha Chaturthi and having dinner at a friend's place in Marathalli on Thursday evening.
They set off at around 9.15 pm for home on their Honda Activa (KA-05-JH-1913) when the fatal accident occurred. As they got on the Devarabeesanahalli flyover on Outer Ring Road, Tripathi saw the huge pothole and tried to avoid it by applying the brakes. But he lost control of the two-wheeler and the couple fell down. Stuti, who was seated sideways as she was wearing a sari, slammed her head directly on the ground, sustaining fatal head injuries, while her husband Tripathi escaped with minor bruises.
The victims were rushed to Sakra World Hospital by passers-by, where Stuti breathed her last around 10.27 pm.
Officials said Tripathi had been wearing a helmet, but Stuti was not. The deceased's body was sent to Bowring Hospital mortuary for post-mortem examination, following which it was handed over to relatives and friends for the last rites.
Is lack of coordination to blame for these deaths?
From cavernous potholes and craters to sudden depressions, badly-paved stretches to almost entirely unnavigable roads, Bengaluru has them all. The blame-game between the city's traffic police and various civic bodies like the BBMP, BDA, and NHAI continues as more and more lives are lost due to bad roads and officials' apathy; or due to rash and negligent driving by careless motorists.
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Re: Husband booked after pothole kills wife
How is that the husband's fault? It's an accident. If anyone it's the national hwy authorities who failed post a pothole warning should be blamed.
When they get arrested n accused of murder they will have to disclose that in every job application n explain what happened. And even though his case will be dismissed without prejudice, all the employers will care about is, he was accused n arrested for the murder of his wife. WTF.
When they get arrested n accused of murder they will have to disclose that in every job application n explain what happened. And even though his case will be dismissed without prejudice, all the employers will care about is, he was accused n arrested for the murder of his wife. WTF.
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