Truro News

Judge calls local intersecti­on ‘nearly a real-life Death Race 2000’

- CHRIS LAMBIE SALTWIRE MEDIA

NEW GLASGOW, N. S. – A New Glasgow driver who treated a red light as a suggestion at an intersecti­on the judge called “nearly a real-life Death Race 2000” for pedestrian­s, has failed in his attempt to fight a ticket.

Luke Thomas Greencorn, 25, was ticketed midmorning on July 12, 2018 for failing to stop at a red light at the intersecti­on of Provost and George streets.

“That intersecti­on is an accident waiting to happen, given the number of motorists who carelessly sail through the red light there every hour of every day, imperillin­g the safety of the public – particular­ly defenceles­s pedestrian­s,” Pictou Provincial Court Judge Del Atwood said in a written decision released Monday.

“I caution myself that Mr. Greencorn is presumed innocent of the charge before the court, and he is not responsibl­e for the actions of others. However, based on the evidence – including the testimony of Mr. Greencorn, himself – I find the prosecutio­n to have proven guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”

The traffic enforcemen­t officer who issued the ticket told the court he was parked beside the intersecti­on when a green sedan southbound on Provost took a right onto George without coming to a full stop. The officer also got video of the event.

“That intersecti­on is an accident waiting to happen, given the number of motorists who carelessly sail through the red light there every hour of every day...”

Judge Del Atwood, from a written decision

“The red lights remain illuminate­d the entire time the sedan approaches the intersecti­on and proceeds through its turn. The recording shows the officer pulling out and stopping the sedan a short distance along George,” Atwood said in the decision, which he delivered orally Friday.

Greencorn admitted he was driving the sedan.

“Mr. Greencorn stated that he approached the intersecti­on at what he believed to be a prudent rate of speed. He did not see any pedestrian­s. He saw the red light, knew it to be a red, but treated it as a yellow, meaning he believed, based on the caution sign, he needed to stop only if pedestrian­s were crossing the roadway; this was why he negotiated the right turn onto George without stopping,” said the decision.

Most drivers turning right on George fail to stop at the red, said the judge.

“Some might slow down a bit; most plough right on through,” Atwood said.

“Few bother to wait for pedestrian­s, rendering the site nearly a real-life Death Race 2000 for those on foot scurrying to get across.”

Death Race 2000 is a 1975 film about a cross- country race in which competitor­s scored by running over pedestrian­s.

The judge — who fined Greencorn $180 for rolling through the red — had a good suggestion to deal with the larger problem.

“A traffic checkpoint positioned there would likely increase the town’s ticket revenue by an order of magnitude if every heedless motorist got pulled over,” Atwood said. “It might also prevent someone getting run over.”

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