The grieving parents of a 7-year-old child who died hours after being hit by a car were charged with involuntary manslaughter after allowing him and his brother, 10, to walk home unaccompanied by an adult from a nearby grocery store.

  • @justgohomealready@sh.itjust.works
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    16110 months ago

    At seven I went to school and back home on foot and alone, about a mile, everyday. I did once have a close call with a car that didn’t stop for a crosswalk.

    Are parents supposed to accompany their kids at all time until they are 18?

    • Maestro
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      9610 months ago

      According to 'murica, until 16. Then they can drive their own car.

        • No, they’re joking. There’s no federal law governing it afaik- only state laws that vary wildly. Child development experts mostly agree that under 8yo is too young to be unaccompanied

          Edit: NC doesn’t have a minimum, and the 7yo was with a 10yo, so it sounds like they have pretty much no case

          • @Joeffect@lemmy.world
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            210 months ago

            The article says they were with an adult who was from the grocery store … So they were with an adult… Just not the parents… Unless I’m reading it wrong… I don’t even see anyone else mentioning this

            • @5too@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              They left their mom at home, and were walking two blocks up the street to meet up with their dad, who was grocery shopping. The dad was on the phone with the older kid at the time, keeping tabs on them while letting them gain confidence going on their own.

              As a parent who struggles not to helicopter my kids, none of this sounds out of line to me. The driver who apparently couldn’t react to a kid stepping out unexpectedly, in what sounds like a residential area? I want to know why he’s got a license.

        • @anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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          1110 months ago

          We have many places where phone distracted drivers have made it too dangerous for any aged person to walk or ride a bike.

          But it’s hyperbole. Kids in cities can get around alone just fine. And my 7 y/o goes to friends houses across a street and the through backyards. We have no sidewalks and fast cars though. So he is extra careful crossing. To the point that he’s basically a crossing guard when we walk together.

          It sucks though because there’s nowhere to safely learn to ride a bike that isn’t driving distance from our house.

    • @RBWells@lemmy.world
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      110 months ago

      Yeah 2 miles here. It’s still the rule, school bus service available if you are more than 2 miles away from school OR would have to cross a dangerous road.

      And no, obviously we are supposed to be precognitive and able to tell if something will happen.

      That said - I would let my kids walk to the shop themselves only if there was no big road to cross. Drivers here will run kids right over. Everyone knows someone with a family member killed by a car.

    • OfCourseNot
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      -2610 months ago

      Yeah when I was seven my sister and I would travel laying in the backseat of the car, no seatbelts, with four adults in a car legally limited to five occupants, and they would smoke inside (rolled down the windows at least). I’m alive, and so is my sister. That doesn’t mean it was alright and we should keep on doing it.

      Parents are supposed to teach their kids to navigate the world and be sure they’ve learned before letting them loose into traffic, which these people didn’t do. Also unloading the responsibility on the older sibling(s) is something that have to stop, a ten years old shouldn’t have to carry that burden, imagine the guilt and trauma of that poor child.

      • @django@discuss.tchncs.de
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        2010 months ago

        Yeah sure, blame the victims of horrible infrastructure. I walked myself to kindergarden, when I was around 4 or 5 years old, when I was 7, I would walk home from school.

        There wasn’t some busy four-lane-road on my way in my rural town. Four fucking lanes? What the hell?

        • OfCourseNot
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          -610 months ago

          Living in a city, I wasn’t allowed to cross roads by myself when I was seven (some thirty years ago) much less four lane ones. The horrible American infrastructure make it even worse for the parents to let their kids go alone. Was the mother not aware of that road being there?

            • @5too@lemmy.world
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              110 months ago

              He’s cooperating with the cops apparently, but it sounds like it was a bystander who was checking on the other kid until their parents could get there.

      • @psivchaz@reddthat.com
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        1210 months ago

        Experts pretty much all agree that kids need some level of autonomy and freedom to grow up healthy. The exact level is under constant debate, and at what age things are appropriate is under constant debate. With freedom and autonomy though will come accidents. It’s an unavoidable consequence. There’s no way to be absolutely certain that a particular kid won’t make a terrible lapse in judgement, no matter how much you’ve drilled something into them. Hell, even adults make those kinds of mistakes all the time.

        Put another way, I could keep my kids very safe by keeping them in the house, tethered to an iPad all the time, unable to leave my earshot, like so many parents seem to do now. They’d be super safe. And they’d grow into the kind of inept, stunted kids that people are constantly complaining about.

  • @A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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    11410 months ago

    “In such cases, adults must be held accountable for their responsibilities to ensure a safe environment for their children,” police said in a statement.

    That’s … beyond callous and (hopefully) has no legal standing, even in the USA.

    Let’s fix it:

    The “adults” who continue building car-friendly environments that are positively dangerous to pedestrians need to be held accountable for their responsibilities to ensure a safe environment.

    • @Buske@lemmy.world
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      2810 months ago

      So the city, as a group of adults, failed also to ensure a safe environment, should also be arrested.

      • @Blooper@lemmynsfw.com
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        110 months ago

        My thoughts exactly. A “safe environment” really means, “don’t raise your kids in these shit hole, car-centric cities and towns all over America”.

  • @topherclay@lemmy.world
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    11310 months ago

    They gotta blame the people who designed the city. If these kids were a small fraction of the same age and in Japan they would be on TV for braving their first solo trip into the market to buy a vegetable for dinner. It would be a cute TV show called “Old Enough” on Netflix with English subtitles instead of a cruel reality on this side of the same planet where a kid is now dead.

    That part of it isn’t the fault of the parents, but the fault of the society we have created.

    Btw that TV show is a few decades old but my point is that the world is possible. We don’t need to be like Japan was in that TV show, but we do need more walkable cities.

    • @ReanuKeeves@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      Imagine your kid dies, your other kid being traumatized by watching his brother die, and then being charged with involuntary manslaughter.

    • @Jimbabwe@lemmy.world
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      3510 months ago

      I came here to mention Old Enough. So sad that my American kid can never have this kind of experience because of how fucked our cities and society are.

  • manxu
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    9410 months ago

    A while back I watched a video about jaywalking. The idea was that, before cars were very common, people would just walk around the street and cars had to go around them. As cars became more common, car owners wanted to get rid of the people on the street, so they invented the term and offense jaywalking. Take something that poor people do (like walking instead of driving) and turn it into an offense.

    This is basically the same thing. Make the parents responsible for what was a driver’s fault on a road that shouldn’t have been built the way it was in what must be a residential area - given that the kids just crossed the street from house to store. You have to turn the victim into the perpetrator, because looking at facts makes the wrong people look guilty.

    • @RedditRefugee69@lemmynsfw.com
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      2410 months ago

      My understanding is it was car lobbyists and PR folks trying to blame pedestrians for fatal car versus pedestrian crashes that invented, spread, and legislated “jay walking.”

      “Jay” was slang for hobo/tramp/loser.

    • @A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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      10 months ago

      TBF, the child ran onto the road (a typical US road that encourages drivers to drive fast and be oblivious of pedestrians, I guess), and - according to the police - the driver was neither speeding nor under the influence and is “cooperative”.

      But to charge the parents with involuntary manslaughter for letting their children walk 2 blocks is madness, and makes me question the police department’s objectivity, to put it mildly.

      My guess is at the very least the driver’s reaction and/or eyesight was impaired due to old age.

      • @Saleh@feddit.org
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        7110 months ago

        You see children next to the road, you slow down. You are the adult operating the deadly machine. You have a duty to be extra careful around kids.

        • @black0ut@pawb.social
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          1910 months ago

          Where I live, if a kid jumps in front of your car, even if there is no crossing and you had no visibility, you still have the majority of the fault. The truth is you are the one driving a killing machine, and if you are going at a speed where you can’t ensure, with your currect visibility and road conditions, that an accident won’t happen, it’s you who is at fault.

          Of course that’s different on highways and speedways, where the one crossing would be found at fault. But for all residential areas, drivers need to be careful about pedestrians crossing the road, and especially kids who are unpredictable.

      • snooggums
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        2010 months ago

        the police department’s objectivity,

        Also the prosecutor’s office, who charges people with crimes.

      • @technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        10 months ago

        the child ran onto the road … according to the police

        You gotta be a child to believe the police.

        makes me question the police department’s objectivity, to put it mildly.

        Ofc cops lie about everything.

      • @Armok_the_bunny@lemmy.world
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        410 months ago

        On top of what everyone else has said, my stance in general is that anyone who harms another with their car should have their license revoked for at least 5 years if they were at all at fault, which this man certainly was being the driver hitting a pedestrian. On top of that, he’s at the age where he should probably stop driving anyway. While I don’t exactly believe this warrants jail time, especially if the driver has been as cooperative as they are saying, I do think he needs to be charged with something just to get him off the road for the foreseeable future. Outside of that though I do agree with you.

        • @technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          310 months ago

          if they were at all at fault

          The driver is always at fault. They’re choosing to use a deadly machine in public. It’s their responsibility not to kill people.

          • @Armok_the_bunny@lemmy.world
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            210 months ago

            That clause was intended specifically for vehicle on vehicle incidents, I agree that if a vehicle hits a pedestrian they are always at fault.

  • @halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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    8910 months ago

    This doesn’t serve justice, in any way.

    Why were the children trying to walk between crosswalks? I’d bet because the only crosswalks anywhere in the area are at stoplights and way too far apart. A painted cross wall at minimum, or a HAWK light that stops vehicle traffic should have been there. But those are too expensive until multiple people are killed by traffic, it takes a lot of blood to get human-cebtric infrastructure installed in this country.

    The crosswalk directly leading to the middle school near me was known by the school and the neighborhood to be dangerous due to traffic speed, and the community had been fighting for a HAWK light to be installed by the county for nearly a decade. They even widened and replaced the road during that time and still refused to install it (although they did install the underground conduit necessary when doing the roadwork). It took 4 children total being killed by vehicles outside of school hours before they finally agreed to install a HAWK light there.

    Charging the parents doesn’t do any public good. I doubt they’re going to find a full jury that could convict unless there’s some underlying information about the parents trying to kill the kids or some shit like that. I can’t imagine a jury of 12 would unanimously convict.l based on the info provided.

  • FundMECFS
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    6810 months ago

    What??? In Switzerland we walked to school by ourselves at age of 4.

  • @huppakee@lemm.ee
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    6810 months ago

    Sounds like evil inception, first the nightmare of losing your child and then the nightmare of possibly losing your job and house etc. I hope they at least don’t have to go through the nightmare of prison (which they would likely have to go through alone, since there is no couples-prison). Evil evil evil

  • @SpicyLizards@reddthat.com
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    6410 months ago

    Gastonia police declined to comment to NBC News, but said in a statement that “there is no evidence of speeding or wrongdoing on the part of the driver, therefore no charges have been filed. The driver continues to be cooperative and the incident remains under active investigation by the Gastonia Police Department’s Traffic Division.”

    Fucking insane. Ancient driver must be good, we must blame someone. How about the folks? They seem to be having a good run!

    • @Saleh@feddit.org
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      6310 months ago

      During my driving lessons in Germany i learned that you always have to slow down around kids. Kids are unpredictable. Kids do not pay attention all the time. Kids struggle with estimating distances and speeds of cars coming your way.

      Unless the case is something like “Kids jumped from a bridge right in front of your car.” There is no way that the driver couldn’t have done something to prevent the accident or at least form it being a fatal accident.

    • @Auli@lemmy.ca
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      -410 months ago

      If you read the story it sounds like the 7 year old just walked out into the street. So he literally could have walked right in front of the guy. The dad was on the phone with the older son which might have ment he wasn’t paying attention to the younger brother b

      • @5too@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        If the driver wasn’t able to respond in time to a pedestrian entering the street, particularly at a crosswalk, he was driving recklessly.

        (Edit) Not a crosswalk, between two crosswalks. I maintain that inability to react to pedestrians safely in an area at least near housing constitutes reckless driving.

        • @5too@lemmy.world
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          510 months ago

          They were going from their house where their mom was 2 blocks up the street to where their dad was shopping. The dad was on the phone with the older kid as they walked. They were not left alone.

        • @grue@lemmy.worldM
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          210 months ago

          In a place with non-negligent zoning and street design, they’d be plenty old enough to walk to a nearby store safely.

  • @Nanook@lemm.ee
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    4910 months ago

    Can we start labeling if something is US. Cause this feels very US. Have you guys tried sidewalks?

  • @5too@lemmy.world
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    4910 months ago

    there is no evidence of speeding or wrongdoing on the part of the driver, therefore no charges have been filed.

    He hit a pedestrian. If you cannot react to a pedestrian entering the road unexpectedly, especially at a crosswalk, you are, by definition, driving recklessly.

    • @samus12345@sh.itjust.works
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      1810 months ago

      The article says they attempted to cross between the crosswalks. A witness said the younger child jumped into the street. There’s only so much reaction even the most alert driver can do.

      • @5too@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Fair point, it was indeed between crosswalks. But from the sound of it, the kids had been waiting to cross, and the younger kid jumped out on his own.

        The older kid saw the danger, meaning the car should have been able to see at least one kid too. I maintain that if you can’t react safely to kids you can see jumping unexpectedly off the curb as you drive by, you have no business driving.

        • @samus12345@sh.itjust.works
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          210 months ago

          Without seeing the incident, it’s hard to say whether the driver should have reasonably been able to stop in time. Given what we know, it’s entirely possible that he could not.

          • @5too@lemmy.world
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            210 months ago

            The only way I can see the driver not being at fault is if he 1) could not see the kids near the road, and 2) had no reason to expect people might be in blind spots near the road.

            Given that there were houses less than 2 blocks from the site of the incident, 2 seems unlikely - this sounds like either a suburban or urban neighborhood (multiple crosswalks within 2 blocks for a 4 lane road). No mention was made of any obstructions, which is not evidence in itself; but it’s the rare four lane road that hasn’t had obstructions cleared from the sides of the road (partly for this reason!), particularly in a non-rural area. At a glance, Gastonia seems to generally keep their roads clear.

            I can certainly be convinced otherwise with more evidence, but the burden of vehicle safety absolutely lies on the driver. If you can’t respond fast enough to a seven year old running out in front of you from a place you can’t see; you are, by definition, driving too fast - regardless of the posted speed limit. And if you can see them, and aren’t driving in such a way as to be able to keep them safe should they run in front of you, you’re driving recklessly.

          • @Don_alForno@feddit.org
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            010 months ago

            In civilized countries it’s perfectly normal and safe to let your children walk to the fucking supermarket and back on their own. How indoctrinated with dystopian habits do you have to be to not realize there’s something deeply wrong here?

            When you’re operating heavy machinery (like a car) it’s your job to ensure you’re not a danger to your surroundings. If you can’t do that you’re not fit to drive.

            • @GoodOleAmerika@lemmy.world
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              010 months ago

              Physics says it does not care of civilized countries. U can’t stop a truck like tundra on a dime. Physics. And even with auto braking these day, no way.

              • @merc@sh.itjust.works
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                110 months ago

                like tundra on a dime

                Um, wut?

                Physics says it does not care of civilized countries

                Civilized countries don’t have trucks going through areas where people live. In North America there are far too many “stroads”.

    • @jsomae@lemmy.ml
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      -110 months ago

      That would mean every driver on the highway is driving recklessly.

      “yes! Now you see how carbrained society is”

      counterpoint: society is to blame, not individual drivers.

  • @Jollyllama@lemmy.world
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    4510 months ago

    NC is a hellscape of stroads and highways. Walking anywhere there is a stressful situation. I’d walk down to the local park and needed to cross 2 lanes of traffic at a crosswalk. The speed limit was 35 yet people flew through doing 50 and this is with medians and a crosswalk. The only way to cross was to begin walking out and hopefully they brake for you.

    • @MachineFab812@discuss.tchncs.de
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      310 months ago

      That’s never the way to cross a street. You look ahead for a gap, then start moving the moment the car in front of the gap passes you. If you’ve gotta run, run, but what you’ve described is nothing short of suicide. Never trust drivers.

    • @squaresinger@lemmy.world
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      510 months ago

      So on this road with no line of sight obstructions at all the driver failed to notice two kids impatiently waiting to cross and failed to slow down a little in case the kid actually jumped in front of the car? That guy is obviously not fit for driving.

    • @5too@lemmy.world
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      110 months ago

      Nice, how’d you come by that? Posted article didn’t have anything but the town name.

  • @technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 months ago

    USA is the premiere shithole country.

    edit: It’s kind of amazing how many people in here take NBC quoting cops as fact. The cops’ tale is obviously bullshit as usual. They’re just reciting whatever the old man said. Ofc he thinks the kid just jumped in front of him. The old coot probably had no idea what was even happening: “I was just driving along when this colored boy jumped under my truck…” Cops are like, “Yes, sir, we understand. It happens all the time. Best we can do is lock up the parents.” —> NBC.

    edit2: Seriously tho, I feel bad for the driver too. This is a good example of how car dependency is not good for the elderly. Let’s get that driver out of a car and onto a train. Ok I gotta get on with my life…

    • @pleasegoaway@lemm.ee
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      1510 months ago

      Ahhhh, that makes sense now: the child was black.

      Gotta get those black people in prison and give them records.