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Passenger filmed climbing out of a moving car and trying to push cyclist

The man who witnessed the incident said he 'couldn't believe what he was seeing' ...

A video shows the shocking moment a passenger climbs out through the window of a moving car in a bid to push over a cyclist.

The clip was caught on a dashcam as Daniel Tereszczuk, 34, and his nine-year-old son drove through Tyldesley, near Wigan.

The passenger in the back seat of a Volkswagen Golf driving in front of the pair can be seen climbing out the window and attempting to push a cyclist in a hi-vis jacket off his bike.

Although the cyclist avoids falling and doesn’t appear fazed by the shocking move, stay at home dad, Daniel, said he was left stunned.

He said: “I couldn’t believe what I was seeing.

“I had my son in the car with me and he was in complete shock too.

"Even he knows how stupid doing something like that is.

“I was trying to see what the driver's reaction was by looking in the wing mirror but I think he was completely oblivious.

“He didn’t seem to know or care.”

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44 comments

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 3 years ago
3 likes
Nigel Garrage wrote:

Rubbish, you can't infer that at all, but I'm sorry if you feel upset by the presence of someone with a different opinion to you. He is far more likely (in my view) to have been trying to scare the cyclist and/or shout abuse at them. And while this is the likeliest scenario, I don't think there would be sufficient evidence to prove this beyond reasonable doubt. For example, in a court of law the passenger could claim he was merely imitating the crowds at the Tour de France by saying "allez allez allez!" in encouragement as they drove past. If he and the driver had wanted to push over the cyclist, he'd have pushed over the cyclist - it wouldn't exactly be a difficult feat would it?

So far more likely to be wanting to "scare the cyclist"?  so you have just admitted that you think the passenger has commited a section 4 public order offence despite the fact that you stated quite clearly that you didn't think there was an offence committed?

Not only that, the nature of the three point seatbelt in a car would mean that the passenger would have had to unclip their seatbelt to get to the position that they got to to try and attack the cyclist means they have also committed a road traffic act.

Ok then, to put it beyond reasonable doubt for you..... There is no justifiable reason for the passenger of the vehicle to lean out of their vehicle to shout "allez allez allez" in encouragment because they can shout that with their seatbelt on and their window rolled down without attempting to strike the cyclist.

But yes your opinion would most likely be prevalent in a Jury because more jurors would be car drivers as opposed to cyclists and as such they could put themselves in the position of the people in the car and come up with any reason, just like you have, to not hold the people in the car accountable for their actions.  And this is why there will never be any change in drivers attitudes because the courts will not convict

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 3 years ago
2 likes
Nigel Garrage wrote:

Nothing to do with car drivers vs cyclists - it's just a logical conclusion looking unemotionally at the facts at hand. And as everyone here knows I'm a keen cyclist myself. Such a keen cyclist I got accused of "virtue signalling" last time I posted a ride.

Emotion has absolutely nothing to do with my arguments and it is nothing to do with motorists vs cyclists.  I would have exactly the same response if it was a pedestrian/motorcyclist on the receiving end of the same action.

As for intent.  I will go back to my baseball bat analogy.  If someone was to be caught of film swinging a baseball bat at someones head and missing.  And that made its way to court would you still be saying that it would be impossible for anyone to prove intent?  That the jury would just believe the accused who said..... I was just practicing my swing and their head was just close to where I happened to swing the bat?  or I was never intending to hit them?

The fact is all of the actions of the passenger are predisposed to it being a deliberate act against the cyclist with intent as opposed to there not being acutal intent for the passenger to try and harm the cyclist. and the facts are :-
 - the passenger rolled down their window and leaned out to around waist level on the direct approach to another road user
 - the passenger took a swing at the other road user and missed
 - the passenger then climbed back in the car after passing the other road user.

Any reasonable person in possession of those 3 facts would come to the conclusion, beyond reasonable doubt that the ONLY reason for those 3 actions was an intent to cause harm to the other road user.

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 3 years ago
1 like
Nigel Garrage wrote:

I'm not "admitting" anything, as my opinion hasn't changed

If going from "It's really hard to tell the intention of the passenger in the video but it's likely to be poorly motivated given the way he leans out of the window - no point really speculating and no prosecutable offence was committed, so it's a bit of a pointless story." to.... "Yes on balance I think the passenger has committed an offence"  is not a change in your opinion then I don't know what is.

The fact that you don't think there is sufficient evidence to prosecute does not change the fact that any offence is a prosecutable offence

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jh2727 replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 3 years ago
2 likes
Nigel Garrage wrote:

If he and the driver had wanted to push over the cyclist, he'd have pushed over the cyclist - it wouldn't exactly be a difficult feat would it?

I not so sure... last article I saw where a passenger killed a cyclist by push her off her bike from a moving car, he managed to kill himself too.

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Mungecrundle replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 3 years ago
2 likes

This is exactly why the driver and passenger need to be questioned about their intent and then prosecuted so that they can explain their intent in open court.

Maybe there is a perfectly reasonable explanation involving the capture of a golden snitch in the quidditch, or whatever it is European team games are going on at the moment, and the cyclist was actually a pitch invader.

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sparrowlegs | 3 years ago
2 likes

That's Wigan for you. Full of retards. Wigan and many of the towns surrounding it, is one of those places you can walk up to anyone and smack them in the face safe in the knowledge they'd have deserved it at some point.

The police are feckless and lazy, the doctors are halfway through writing a sick note for you as you walk through the door and it's full of the toothless, short-gaited substance abusers pushing prams.

I avoid riding through any town centre round there because they are all death traps for cyclists. 

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markieteeee replied to sparrowlegs | 3 years ago
6 likes

But you can buy a pie barm, so it's not all bad.

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Rik Mayals unde... replied to markieteeee | 3 years ago
3 likes

What time is it when there's a meat pie on the clock in Wigan?

Summat to eight.

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Rik Mayals unde... replied to sparrowlegs | 3 years ago
0 likes

Have you ever cycled down New Hall Lane in Preston? It makes Wigan look like Mayfair in London.

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Steve K replied to sparrowlegs | 3 years ago
1 like

Can you please not use the 'R' word - it is extremely offensive.

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Hirsute | 3 years ago
2 likes

"Two sides to every story. As usual only one published. "

"It the police in the car. Keeping cyclist off our role is what we pay tax for cars rules the roads" [translation required]

 

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ktache replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
0 likes

And our friend swldxer seems to be his usual corrective self in the comments too...

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Hirsute replied to ktache | 3 years ago
2 likes

I'm still wondering what the other side of the story is and how this works with other crimes : when someone is burgled, robbed, has their car stolen etc

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Jetmans Dad replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
1 like
hirsute wrote:

I'm still wondering what the other side of the story is and how this works with other crimes : when someone is burgled, robbed, has their car stolen etc

Clearly you shouldn't buy stuff people might want to steal ...

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