2012 Chicago fatality stats*:
Pedestrian: 23 (12 have been hit-and-run crashes)
Pedalcyclist: 6 (1 is a hit-and-run crash)
Transit: 8 (our last update listed 7)
Skateboard: 1 (1 is a hit-and-run crash)
Update November 17, 09:30: The driver turned himself in on Thursday. Fernando Jasso Perez, 23, has never had a driver’s license. “Cook County Judge Donald Panarese Jr. set bail at $750,000 for Perez, who was charged with reckless homicide and failure to report the crash” (source). The Chicago Sun-Times published an editorial Friday urging state legislators to create a visitor drivers license for illegal immigrants. One of the benefits they espoused? “Police officers making a stop would know who is driving the car. With the threat of deportation lessened, illegal immigrants would have less of a motivation to leave the scene of an accident.”
Tsering Dorjee, a 44-year-old Tibetan man from India, was killed in a fatal hit-and-run crash on Monday around 6 PM in the 6400 block of N Maplewood Avenue in West Rogers Park and police are still looking for the driver, according to the Chicago Tribune.
Dorjee worked in the Cook County Clerk’s office and was the president of the Rogers Park Chamber of Commerce.
“It’s very distressing and very disappointing because, in our community, we have very few deaths but they are natural – sickness or old age,” [Lhakpa] Tsering said [president of the Tibetan Alliance of Chicago]. “This is the first time a hit-and-run has taken a life in our community.’”
The car was described as a dark blue Volkswagen Beetle with the Illinois license plate P121817. Police asked anyone with information to call 312-745-4521.
Dorjee’s brother-in-law, Dakpa Jorden, 46, “was also injured in the collision and suffered a fractured neck and leg”, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.
* The information is only accurate as of this post’s publishing time. View previous Fatality Tracker posts.
There are parts of this story I just don’t get. They had a license plate from the start. They got the car a short while later. They should at least know who the car’s registered to. Why haven’t they at least said so? If they can’t find the owner, while haven’t thy released the name? This makes no sense to me.
So sad. As an Evanstonian, it hits me close to home geographically. As a dad, it hits me close to home emotionally. I can’t imagine my kids asking, “Where’s daddy,” after I’ve been killed by a driver and then my wife having to do it all alone.
I think it’s just a matter of time until a fatal crash occurs that involves someone I know.