A hit and run driver who knocked a cyclist from her bike and fled the scene was arrested in Michigan after a police dog tracked the motorist and flushed her out of woodland to be met by officers.
Michigan State Police say that officers from Cadillac Post in Manistee County, which lies on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan, were called to the scene of the crash on Kurick Road near Dzuibanek Road in Springdale Township at around 3.45pm on Friday 3 May.
The crash left the cyclist, a 73-year-old woman from Thompsonville, hospitalised at Munson Medical Center in Frankfort with what were described as non-life-threatening injuries, reports UpNorthLive.com.
A 41-year-old woman claimed that she had been driving the car, but later admitted that she was a passenger in the vehicle, with the actual driver, a 35-year-old woman with an outstanding arrest warrant, having fled the scene on foot.
A search of the vehicle led to the discovery of methamphetamines as well as a stun gun, and a police dog handler, accompanied by Police Dog Ox, were called to the scene and tracked the wanted driver through five miles of swamp and thick woodland.
When the woman eventually came out of the woods, she was met by police officers who arrested her and took her to Manistee County Jail where she was reported to be awaiting arraignment.
News of the successful chase comes at the start of National Cyclist Safety Month in the United States, with Michigan State Police saying that 36 cyclists were killed and 1,030 injured on the state’s roads during 2022.
Katie Bower, director of the Michigan Office of Highway Safety Planning (OHSP), which described a recent increase in the number of cyclist fatalities as “alarming,” said: “We continue to see a rise in bicycle-involved crashes in many communities across the state.
“Traffic safety is a shared responsibility,” she continued. “During National Bicycle Safety Month, the OHSP and our traffic safety partners will be working to educate residents about the importance of bicycle safety and the traffic laws designed to protect bicyclists.
“Motorists and bicyclists can avoid crashes if they know and follow the rules of the road and watch out for each other,” she added.
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7 comments
That Katie Bower of the OHSP seems to have the right idea on some of the priorities of bicycle safety month.
"A search of the vehicle led to the discovery of methamphetamines as well as a stun gun, and a police dog handler, accompanied by Police Dog Ox,".
The comma after "gun" is incorrect, as it makes you think the list is continuing but the "and" is a conjunction joining two sentences. The subject "police dog handler", due to the prescence of a non-specifying relative clause, also appears separated from the verb and predicate by commas, again not usual and (very slightly) confusing. Also amusing, though.
No, it isn't. "A search of the vehicle led to the discovery of methamphetamines as well as a stun gun and a police dog handler..." would imply that the police dog handler was disovered as part of the vehicle search; the comma, though it may be frowned upon by anti-Oxfordians, makes the sense perfectly clear (if one quotes the whole sentence rather than truncates it for amusement purposes).
You are perfectly correct that only truncating the sentence permits the ambiguity. I still beg to differ on the comma.
Plenty of iffy writing on this website - it is a blog after all - but this sentence ain't the worst.
If we're going to be grammar pedants (a risky business at the best of times), let's be robust with our grammar facts. 1) There's nothing incorrect about that comma. The sentence isn't the most elegant, but it works. 2) Oxford comma is there none: that's a joining comma.
Right. It's grammatical, but initially misleading. This is known as a garden path sentence.