DAYTON | Doctors revived a man Sunday just hours after medics pronounced him dead on the scene of a car crash, police officials said.
Dayton Police Sgt. Charles Hurley said Scott Tegtmeyer was walking in the intersection of Third Street and Edwin C. Moses Boulevard at 12:40 p.m. when a Chrysler PT Cruiser ran a red light, struck a Subaru sports utility vehicle and sent it into the air.
The Subaru landed upside down on Tegtmeyer and dragged him several feet across the intersection, Hurley said. Tegtmeyer, bloodied and surrounded by shattered glass, was pronounced dead on the scene, but he suddenly started breathing while in transit with paramedics. By 3 p.m., doctors had fully resuscitated him.
On Sunday evening, he was in the Miami Valley Hospital Intensive Care Unit.
Neither of the female drivers of the vehicles involved were carrying passengers. The woman driving the Subaru was transported to Miami Valley Hospital. Information on the condition of the driver of the PT Cruiser was not available. Hurley said police talked to eight witnesses. He also said it is possible a camera mounted high above the intersection captured the crash.
Dayton police reconstructionists, trained at putting clues together after crashes, were on the scene with digital cameras and measuring devices. The flipped Subaru showed noticeable crash damage on the left body panel. Ten yards away, the customized P.T. Cruiser with a "AAA" sticker on the back of its tinted windows showed damage to its front end.
flagreen said:I am assuming that the car that flipped over had the green light. If so the pedestrian must have been walking against the "Don't Walk" signal. Either that or the PT Crusier had the green light?
flagreen said:I am assuming that the car that flipped over had the green light. If so the pedestrian must have been walking against the "Don't Walk" signal.
No I don't think so. Either way, walk or don't walk, it wasn't the ped's fault. I was taught that pedestrians always have the right of way.sechs said:flagreen said:I am assuming that the car that flipped over had the green light. If so the pedestrian must have been walking against the "Don't Walk" signal.
Are you supposed to stop walking if the signal changes when you're in the middle of the road?
AgreedHowell said:I think it appropriate to assume that the stopped cars had the red light.
Disagree. The Subaru was travelling in the left west* bound lane. The Pedestrian was already within the right west bound lane at the moment the two cars impacted. The Subaru is noticeably driven northwards (as should be expected) before it even begins to roll. Go full screen mode and use the black (tire mark) lines in the road as a reference point and you'll see what I mean. Had the pedestrian froze the instant he heard the crash, he might just have been in the clear. It certainly would have been close.I think the ped was going to be squashed either way, the Subaru did not change course or speed that much