the ghost bikes film documentary project is exploring the intersection of street art, activism, and mourning on the streets of cities around the world. this blog is an aggregation of ongoing discourse about ghost bike activities and bicycling advocacy all over the world.


Posts tagged LA


Photo

Dec 17, 2011
@ 12:30 pm
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4 notes

ghost bike for Manual Santizo
Los Angeles, CA
April 2011
bikeliving:

A Ghost Bike For Manuel Santizo

ghost bike for Manual Santizo

Los Angeles, CA

April 2011

bikeliving:

A Ghost Bike For Manuel Santizo


Video

Oct 24, 2011
@ 12:30 pm
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[Flash 10 is required to watch video]

ghost bike for Detective Duane Parkinson, killed August 10, 2011
Shady Canyon Drive, south of Quail Hill Parkway 
Irvine, CA

from the OC Register:

Parkison was cycling northbound on Shady Canyon just south of Quail Hill Parkway about 1 p.m. when police say he was struck by a Mercedes-Benz SUV traveling in the same direction.

Two other bicyclists were reportedly performing CPR on Parkison when officers and firefighters arrived.

Cyclist killed by SUV in Irvine Wednesday afternoon

Local detective killed when car, bike collide

Ghost Bike for Duane Parkinson, 8.20.11

via zkofilms 


Photo

Apr 1, 2011
@ 12:30 pm
Permalink
54 notes

latimes:

Did you know that L.A.’s Department of Transportation has a bike program? And that the LADOT Bike Program has a website? And that it recently updated its bike maps for the City of Los Angeles, including the San Fernando Valley? And you can request maps completely free of charge? You didn’t? 
Well, now you have no excuse.
Photo: New bike maps being prepared for mailing. Credit: LADOT Bike Blog

latimes:

Did you know that L.A.’s Department of Transportation has a bike program? And that the LADOT Bike Program has a website? And that it recently updated its bike maps for the City of Los Angeles, including the San Fernando Valley? And you can request maps completely free of charge? You didn’t? 

Well, now you have no excuse.

Photo: New bike maps being prepared for mailing. Credit: LADOT Bike Blog


Link

Dec 3, 2010
@ 12:30 pm
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1 note

The sister of fallen cyclist James Laing pauses to say thank you »

The sister of fallen cyclist James Laing pauses to say thank you

Chances are, you didn’t notice it.

It was just a comment that appeared on here Monday, on a story I wrote a couple weeks ago. But who wrote it, and what she had to say, speaks volumes.

It seems like such small and insignificant gestures to install a ghost bike or hold a ride in memory of a fallen cyclist. Not nearly enough to ease our overwhelming sadness and anger, or bring comfort to the families of the victims.

Let alone result in real change on our roads to keep it from happening again.

Then I read this comment from Peggy Laing-Krause, the sister of James Laing — the cyclist killed by an alleged drunk driver in Agoura Hills last month:

What a beautiful tribute to my brother to ride in his honor and visit the accident site.  I have come down from Sacramento 3 times since Jim’s death and each time I visit the site, it has grown larger than the last. So touching to me, and to my family who live in So. Cal., to see the compassion from all the riders.  Being an avid cyclist myself, I know of the close unity that exists in the bicycling community… no matter where you live.  Thank you for your tremendous support and thoughtful coverage of Jim’s accident.  You ARE making a difference.

I must have read that a dozen times over the past couple days. And it’s brought a tear to my eye every time.

And yes, it makes me feel even more guilty that I wasn’t able to be there for the memorial ride.

So to the San Fernando Valley Bicycle Club, who sponsored the ride in memory of James Laing, and the Bicycle Johns Agoura Hills, who went out of their way to accommodate the riders and make it happen — thank you.

And to everyone who has taken the time to remember James, Danny MarinMichael Nine or any of the far too many other riders who’ve fallen on SoCal streets in recent months, in whatever way, take just a moment to take Peggy’s comment in.

You are making a difference.

For the families of the victims. And for all of us.

via BikingInLA


Link

Apr 19, 2010
@ 12:31 pm
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Introducing the League of Bicycling Voters Los Angeles »

intersection911:

A countywide organization dedicated to harnessing the power of the cycling community to influence the electoral process. An organization that will host forums and debates to get candidates on the record for their stands on biking issues, endorse and support bike-friendly candidates and propositions, and hold elected officials accountable for keeping their promises.




Chat

Jan 15, 2010
@ 11:59 am
Permalink

responses to LA Times article on case of 'Dr. Road Rage' in LA (http://bit.ly/drRoadRage)

Otis9454 (01/07/2010, 9.35 PM): No love for the doctor, but no love for cyclists who unlawfully clog streets. Mandeville Canyon is no place to club-ride, and it's certainly no place to give a motorist "the finger." Bottom line, though - punishment (broken bodies) did not fit the crime.

Jeffrey526 (01/07/2010, 9.56 PM): I have ridden Mandeville - similar results. Had a person put their fender into me and push me into the curb. Police wouldn't take a report and no resolution was had - just two idiots screaming at a cyclist to "get out of their canyon". This Doctor needs to arry that banner no matter what the outcome - but he needs to be punished. Everyone else need to be more respectfull to each other and maybe even learn something.

NG90291 (01/07/2010, 10.02 PM): It is not about who breaks the law more, a driver on the phone or a cyclist going through a stop sign. This case is about a deliberate act to harm someone with direct intent. The doctor acted deliberately to injure the cyclists. A deliberate act to harm deserves a deliberate act to punish.

bwnoel (01/08/2010, 5.57 AM): I'm continually amazed by people who want to excuse perpetrators of violent crimes. This man deliberately took an action to physically harm the cyclists involved in this accident. Who cares what he did for a living, this guy is a criminal, worse, as an emergency room physician with years of experience, knew full well what the results of his actions could well be. Put this s.o.b. behind bars where he belongs. This man's other related punishments, loss of license, etc., come with the territory of being a convicted felon. As a road cyclist of 30 years experience, I've come close many times to being hit by some jerk who feels that only cars and trucks are allowed on the roads. There are consequences to wrong actions, period.

KL626 (01/08/2010, 6.29 AM): Agreed, this doctor let his ego get in the way and crossed the line. HOWEVER, some cyclists defy the rules of the road and do as they please. For us to minimize these sort of actions cyclists too need to follow the standard laws. If cyclists want the respect of drivers for the sake of safety, cyclists need to respect the laws as well.

bikecrave (01/08/2010, 7.47 AM): The judge must apply the law and respect the findings of the jury. This isn't about renegade cyclists. This is about a man in a car who decided that his own rage was more important than anything else. Thankfully no one died.

KateNonymous (01/08/2010, 9.52 AM): I hate to break it to Michael Oana, but someone who "acted without thinking" can indeed be a criminal, if their actions constitute a crime. Christopher Thompson did just that, as determined by a jury, and he deserves punishment for those actions.

burnedAlaskan (01/08/2010, 9.57 AM): What shocks, angers and disgusts me the most is that guy was an ER physician of all things and left these obviously injured people to rot in the street and not attend to or even give a cursory examination as to their injuries. They could have had head trauma. At the very least he should have known -- correct that -- he DID KNOW -- to stabilize their heads and necks; particularly the fellow with the facial injuries. When 911 asked if the cyclists were hurt he said "yes, but they can tell you about it." He showed clear reckless disregard for human life. I'm glad he's broke, I'm glad he's been run out of town, and anyone who says he's a compassionate and caring doctor must also believe in the Easter Bunny and Area 51. No compassionate and caring doctor deliberately injures people and then lets them lay injured in the road and stands by and does nothing -- particularly when their specialty is emergency medicine. He deserves jail time -- particularly as he has a history of tangling with bicyclists before. He seemed to think the canyon was his own personal property and now he's going to find out the hard way it wasn't.

SFBXB (01/08/2010, 10.08 AM): It appears that Thompson's supporters condone breaking the law if one has contributed to the community. That makes little sense. I'm an avid cyclist and I've seen a number of cyclists break many traffic laws. I too have done it - in the past. We, as cyclists, cannot control the actions or reactions of drivers, we can only remain vigilant and on guard. Until we get bumpers on our butts, we're no match for an auto. Thompson should be sentenced to 8 years regardless of his health and contribution. Those being as they are cannot be considered permission for him to injure others. Is he some sort of "angel of mercy" attempting to erradicate his neighborhood of law-breaking cyclists? Sounds like he's a vigilante of sorts. One time, while riding a taking my space in a left turn lane and waiting for the light to change, a driver pulled up behind me and though he too couldn't turn, he started "condemning" (I use the term loosely) me for taking a space in the lane. I told him that we get yelled at for following the law and yelled at for not following the law. "Where do you want me to go?" He wanted me off the road. Period. We'll never overcome the hatred of some drivers, we can only ride defensively within the law and realize that a car is much larger than we are.

evadtheslayer (01/08/2010, 10.09 AM): Hope he gets a nice LONG sentence in a real prision and not some country side prision farm. Obviously his license to practice as an MD should be permanently revoked. I don't much care how nice he is when not around cyclists, the fact is he cannot control his temper and used a 2 ton vehicle to smash up the cyclists. I sincerely hope the judge in this case is wise enough to have this "doctor" do signifant time. Maybe that will teach LA drivers a little more courtesy around those on 20 pound bicycles.

rjfj (01/08/2010, 10.28 AM): After reading through the article I don't believe the doctor should do time for his act. Cyclists all over the San Gabriel Valley ride on the road blocking cars and making it difficult to continue on the ROAD to THEIR destination. The Cyclists should get the heck out of the way and if they don't and disrespectfully block traffic THEY ARE PUTTING THEIR OWN LIVES AT RISK! Cyclists need to obey the rules of the road just like everyone else! Welcome to the Universe! There are OTHERS to CONSIDER!

tomato23 (01/08/2010, 10.47 AM): @rjfj wake up buddy - cyclists have the right to use the full lane - Section 21202(c) of the Vehicle Code expressly allows cyclists to take the lane when it is "too narrow for a bicycle and a vehicle to travel safely side by side within the lane." and when going down mandeville on a bike, we are going the speed limit. there is no reason for cars to try and pass if it is a narrow stretch we choose to take over, which it is.

dougyfish (01/08/2010, 11.32 AM): I just wanted to comment on one aspect of this story. The issue of the bikers blocking traffic. As I understand it the speed limit on that road is 30mph. The bikes were travelling 30mph. They were'nt blocking traffic. They were traffic.

atjatjat (01/08/2010, 12.16 PM): All I can say by looking at these comments is WOW, I had no idea that drivers had such universal lack of understanding of the rules of the road. I suspect that most of the "Friends of dr death" would have a very hard time passing today's drivers tests and should have their licenses revoked. It is a very strong argument for retesting of drivers. We study for a few weesk at age 15, and get a driver's license for life. That test should be repeated every 5 to 10 years, including the theoretical part.

speedracer357 (01/08/2010, 1.08 PM): Rjfj - I have no idea what "universe" you live in, but I will never ride a bike there! So you want to break the law by speeding and be able to cause bodily harm to whomever happens to impede you? Cyclists have the right to use the road in this universe, I'm not sure the state should afford you that same privilege.

mapact (01/08/2010, 1.29 PM): @ riffi - you still don't get it. "Thought process" had nothing to do with the injuries in this case. They were due to cyclists following the vehicle code and being passed (illegally) and then intentionally injured by braking. Why is it so hard to grasp that that behavior warrants punishment? "Taking over" is the same thing a vehicle does when it travels the speed limit and prevents those who (illegally) want to go faster from doing so. Those here who think that riders outfits (goodkitty), the fact that they break the law too (iberian), etc. are relevant facts and justify violence are missing the point that there is a massive power imbalance between those on bikes and those in cars. Might makes right? Is that as deeply as your thinking goes?


Quote

Jan 14, 2010
@ 6:00 pm
Permalink

What shocks, angers and disgusts me the most is that guy was an ER physician of all things and left these obviously injured people to rot in the street and not attend to or even give a cursory examination as to their injuries. They could have had head trauma. At the very least he should have known — correct that — he DID KNOW — to stabilize their heads and necks; particularly the fellow with the facial injuries. When 911 asked if the cyclists were hurt he said “yes, but they can tell you about it.” He showed clear reckless disregard for human life. I’m glad he’s broke, I’m glad he’s been run out of town, and anyone who says he’s a compassionate and caring doctor must also believe in the Easter Bunny and Area 51. No compassionate and caring doctor deliberately injures people and then lets them lay injured in the road and stands by and does nothing — particularly when their specialty is emergency medicine. He deserves jail time — particularly as he has a history of tangling with bicyclists before. He seemed to think the canyon was his own personal property and now he’s going to find out the hard way it wasn’t.

posted in response to LA Times article on sentencing of ‘Dr. Road Rage’

Today, January 8, Dr. Christopher Thomspon received a sentence of 5 years after assaulting and seriously injuring two cyclists with his car after a road rage incident in LA.

additional info via Associate Press:

Christopher Thompson, 60, wept and apologized to the two injured riders before he was sentenced in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
“The physical and mental scars are my fault,” he said.
He has recurring nightmares about one cyclist smashing through his car window, Thompson said.
Prosecutors had sought an eight-year term while Thompson’s attorney argued for probation.
Thompson, who worked at Beverly Hospital in Montebello, has been jailed since he was convicted in November of assault with a deadly weapon, battery with serious bodily injury, reckless driving and mayhem.
Thompson deliberately hit his brakes, causing the bicyclists to hit the back of his Infiniti sedan on July 4, 2008, prosecutors said. One rider smashed through the back window, breaking his nose and front teeth. The other crashed to the pavement, separating his shoulder.


Quote

Jan 9, 2010
@ 12:22 pm
Permalink

I’m a cyclist and the first one to admit there are a lot of cyclists out there with major entitlement issues. But this doc crossed the line. He made a choice to seiously hurt these guys. And precisely because he’s a doctor, he had to know somewhere in that twisted mind that his actions could have killed. Throw the book at him.

posted in response to LA Times article on sentencing of ‘Dr. Road Rage’

Today, January 8, Dr. Christopher Thomspon received a sentence of 5 years after assaulting and seriously injuring two cyclists with his car after a road rage incident in LA.

additional info via Associate Press:

Christopher Thompson, 60, wept and apologized to the two injured riders before he was sentenced in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
“The physical and mental scars are my fault,” he said.
He has recurring nightmares about one cyclist smashing through his car window, Thompson said.
Prosecutors had sought an eight-year term while Thompson’s attorney argued for probation.
Thompson, who worked at Beverly Hospital in Montebello, has been jailed since he was convicted in November of assault with a deadly weapon, battery with serious bodily injury, reckless driving and mayhem.
Thompson deliberately hit his brakes, causing the bicyclists to hit the back of his Infiniti sedan on July 4, 2008, prosecutors said. One rider smashed through the back window, breaking his nose and front teeth. The other crashed to the pavement, separating his shoulder.


Link

Jan 8, 2010
@ 5:07 pm
Permalink

LA Dr Gets 5 Year Prison Term For Anti-Bicyclists Road Rage »

by Frank James via NPR

Many people can relate to having a moment behind the steering wheel they’d rather forget about when they’ve gotten so angry at someone else on the road that it took every inch of self-control to keep from doing something stupid.

Then there are those who weren’t able to stop themselves before something terrible happened. Dr. Christopher Thompson of Los Angeles, newly sentenced to five years in prison for indulging his road rage by using his car to take out two bicyclists in an accident that left them seriously injured.

He was convicted of assaulting for his role in the accident. On Friday at his sentencing, he appeared to be the soul of contrition in the courtroom.

As the Los Angeles Times reports:

A doctor convicted of assaulting two bicyclists by slamming on his car brakes after a confrontation on a narrow Brentwood road was sentenced today to five years in prison.
Christopher Thompson, wearing dark blue jail scrubs, wept as he apologized to the injured cyclists shortly before he was sentenced.
“I would like to apologize deeply, profoundly from the bottom of my heart,” he told them, his right hand cuffed to a court chair.
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Scott T. Millington called the case a “wake-up call” to motorists and cyclists and urged local government to provide riders with more bike lanes. He said he believed that Thompson had shown a lack of remorse during the case and that the victims were particularly vulnerable while riding their bicycles.
The case against Thompson, 60, has drawn close scrutiny from bicycle riders around the country, many of whom viewed the outcome as a test of the justice system’s commitment to protecting cyclists.
Millington said he did not take into account more than 270 e-mails and letters from cyclists that were filed with the court urging a tough sentence.
The July 4, 2008, crash also highlighted simmering tensions between cyclists and residents along Mandeville Canyon Road, the winding five-mile residential street where the crash took place.
One cyclist was flung face-first into the rear window of Thompson’s red Infiniti, breaking his front teeth and nose and cutting his face. The other cyclist slammed into the sidewalk and suffered a separated shoulder.
At his sentencing hearing at the county’s airport branch court, Thompson cited the Bible in urging cyclists and residents of Mandeville Canyon to try to resolve their differences peacefully.
“If my incident shows anything it’s that confrontation leads to an escalation of hostilities,” Thompson said.

As the story suggests, it appears Thompson’s contrition came to late since the judge found him to be rather lacking in that quality during the trial.

The irony of a one-time ER doc putting the lives of a couple of bikers at risk because of a road-sharing dispute is inescapable and something Thompson will presumably have a lot of time to think about over the next few years.