DA Candidate Aborn: Traffic Deaths Not Just “Accidents”

Candidate for Manhattan district attorney Richard Aborn has a piece on The Huffington Post today comparing New York homicides with traffic fatalities, and pledging to give traffic crime the attention it deserves.

aborn.jpgRichard Aborn. Photo: Brad Aaron

While "effective policing and prosecution" have lowered the homicide rate to around 500 per year, Aborn says, the city’s 300 annual road deaths indicate that traffic enforcement has not kept up with other efforts to improve safety for pedestrians and cyclists.

There is no reason why the traffic fatality rate should be so high. These are not just "accidents" — they are preventable deaths. And if we focused similar attention on these deaths as we do on homicides, we could prevent many of them.

When I was the president of Jim and Sarah Brady’s Handgun Control, Inc, we decided to take on the problem of shooting "accidents" in the home. There was an epidemic of children finding a parent’s gun and accidentally shooting it. Through a combination of education focusing on the idea that these "accidents" could be prevented and advocacy, we passed child accident prevention laws in many states that made gun owners liable for accidents that should have been prevented.

The city’s District Attorneys’ offices need to send a message that they will be very serious in investigating traffic fatalities. If a fatality can be prosecuted as criminally negligent homicide, it will be. To that end, I will have specialized Assistant District Attorneys with the training necessary to prosecute these crimes effectively.

Aborn goes on to say that prosecuting killer drivers after the fact isn’t good enough — effective enforcement must include punishment for dangerous behavior before it results in injury or death. It’s impossible to know how such promises would hold up against the day-to-day reality of a police department satisfied with the status quo, but it’s refreshing language to hear from someone who could be Manhattan’s next top prosecutor.

"As District Attorney," Aborn concludes, "I commit to dedicating appropriate resources to ensure that traffic fatalities become as rare as bike lanes used to be."

ALSO ON STREETSBLOG

Manhattan’s Next Top Prosecutor: This Is It

|
L-r: Manhattan DA candidates Richard Aborn, Cy Vance and Leslie Crocker Snyder Two pedestrians were killed in Brooklyn over the weekend. Saturday evening, 66-year-old Fred Wilson took the family dog and went out for ice cream. He had only walked a short distance from his Gerritsen Avenue home when he was hit by an unidentified […]

DA Candidate Aborn Unveils Transportation Safety Plank

|
The collision that claimed the life of eight-year-old Axel Pablo yesterday afternoon was another sobering reminder of New York City law enforcement’s institutional failure to deter deadly driving. Police let the cab driver who killed Pablo, Akim Saiful Alam, leave their custody after deciding that he had not committed a criminal act. Even adherence to […]

DA Candidates Pledge Tougher Stance on Vehicular Crime

|
(l-r): Richard Aborn, Cyrus Vance, Jr., Richard Socarides, Jonathan Oberman. Photo: Brad Aaron Drivers who kill and maim pedestrians and cyclists should be subject to thorough investigation and, when warranted, vigorous prosecution, candidates for Manhattan District Attorney said today. Cyrus Vance, Jr. and Richard Aborn addressed a small crowd of advocates, citizens and reporters at […]

DA Candidate Cy Vance Outlines Traffic Safety Platform

|
Cy Vance has become the second contender for Manhattan district attorney to release a campaign plank on traffic crime. Cy Vance, Jr. Photo: Brad Aaron Vance’s proposals, detailed on his campaign web site, are impressively broad in scope. On the legislative front, Vance says he would advocate for graduated penalties for repeat traffic offenders and […]

DA Candidate Snyder Releases Traffic Safety Plan

|
The Leslie Crocker Snyder campaign has announced a detailed transportation safety plank, rounding out a field of Manhattan district attorney candidates committed to advancements in traffic justice. Leslie Crocker Snyder Like Richard Aborn and Cy Vance, Snyder says she would: focus on prevention and deterrence through stepped-up enforcement and graduated penalties for gateway offenses like […]