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Tag: Holmes Beach accident

Daughter sues over mother’s death

HOLMES BEACH – Deborah Trotter returned last week to the site of the May 12, 2023 accident that took the life of her mother, Miriam Trotter, to warn others of safety issues inherent in construction zones.

Trotter has avoided the intersection of Gulf Drive and Marina Drive since she and her 86-year-old mother were struck by an oncoming truck while in the crosswalk. On Feb. 28, she and her attorney spoke at a news conference there about what she said was a preventable tragedy if the onsite construction team had maintained proper safety precautions.

“This shouldn’t have happened and I would never want this to happen to anybody else,” Trotter said.

“This is all about the construction that’s going on not only in this area, and the contractors really need to start doing their job better,” said Trotter’s attorney, Douglas McCarron, of the Haggard Law Firm. “They need to make sure they’re not putting pedestrians and the driving public at risk.”

McCarron has filed a wrongful death negligence lawsuit on behalf of Trotter against the driver of the truck, Michael Ritchie, and C-Squared General Contractors, which was working on the intersection.

“On the day of the incident, May 12, the driver Mr. Ritchie had the green light, Deb and her mom had the signal that it was safe for them to cross to street and there was the crash that cost Miriam her life,” McCarron said. “You’re never going to be able to replace Miriam, you’re never going to be able to give Deb back the time she’s missing from her mom. But the fact is, she doesn’t want this to happen to anybody else. Contractors are responsible to keep people safe, it’s that simple. At the end of the day, we’re just trying to make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

“I remember the whole thing, we were walking from where we live at the Martinique two blocks down. Mom wanted to go to a painting class at the library that afternoon, and so we were walking, she was still getting her steps in, she walked about five miles every day,” Trotter said.

Trotter recalled hitting the button at the crosswalk and when it turned white with the walk symbol, she said to her mother, “OK mom, we can cross now.”

“As we stepped off the curb, I turned ever so slightly to say something to her – she was about a foot behind me – and when I turned I actually saw the truck in my face hit me. I remembered hearing the noise, my eyes closed, I went backwards,” Trotter said, holding back tears. “But the thing I remember the most is that was my mother’s last conscious breath right next to me. And she was… I never spoke to her consciously again.”

Trotter said as she lay on the ground paramedics asked who her mother was and said, “She’s in worse shape than you are, we’re going to tend to her first.”

The Trotters were transported to Blake Hospital, where Deborah was released later that day. Her mother was placed on life support and died five days later.

“My mom was my best friend, she was my hero,” Trotter said. “She was the light of our family, she was the matriarch, she loved life. Hard pressed to find her not smiling and she loved coming for long visits here on the Island. She was so happy to be here, and the fact that she’ll never be here again, I’ll never understand why she was killed.”

Trotter expressed the hope that the incident will be an awakening for contractors and visitors to the Island.

“It’s clear to me that it wasn’t safe that day, the lights at the intersection itself wasn’t safe,” Trotter said. “We thought it was, that’s why we used the crosswalk, it’s clear to me the contractors who were working on it for so long didn’t take the right safety precautions. It’s clear to me that the driver didn’t take the correct safety precautions to yield to pedestrians in a marked active crosswalk.”

McCarron said construction site safety is the responsibility of the contractor.

“Body-worn cameras by police and sheriffs show barricades and things of that nature were either down or weren’t in an area where you were walking up the street,” he said. “There were no signs, there was a sidewalk closed sign in the parking lot facing down and there was a sidewalk closed sign on the other side of the street facing that way. The maintenance of traffic is the responsibility of the contractor. There was no reason for anyone to think the sidewalk was closed.”

“This didn’t need to happen and she and I should be sitting on the beach right now watching the waves,” Trotter said.

“The police investigation was very clear that the signalization was wrong,” McCarron said. “My understanding is that the lights have been changed and when the sign says people can walk, every light is a red light, as it should be.”

Pedestrians struck while crossing street

Pedestrians struck while crossing street

HOLMES BEACH – The intersection of Gulf Drive and Marina Drive in Holmes Beach was temporarily closed May 12 after two female pedestrians were struck by a truck while crossing the street in a marked crosswalk. The driver, Michael Ritchie of Bradenton, told police he had the green light and did not see the women as he was turning left from southbound Marina Drive onto southbound Gulf Drive.

“It’s important for motorists to understand that they must yield to pedestrians even if the light is green, as it was in this case,” Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer said. “The only time a person turning left has the right of way over pedestrians is when they have a green left-turn arrow. There is no arrow at this intersection, so drivers always need to be alert when turning.”

The two women, identified as Miriam and Deborah Trotter, both sustained injuries. While D. Trotter was released from HCA Blake Medical Center the same day, M. Trotter suffered critical injuries and remains on life support at press time for The Sun.

Ritchie was cited for failure to yield to a pedestrian.

Suspect enters not guilty plea in fatal hit and run

Suspect enters not guilty plea in fatal hit and run

HOLMES BEACH – A hit-and-run traffic accident on Gulf Drive that caused the death of a pedestrian has resulted in a local woman being charged with a felony – leaving the scene of a crash that resulted in a death.

Driver Cierra Shannon has entered a plea of not guilty in Manatee County 12th Judicial Circuit Court.

Attorney Ronald Filipkowski entered a plea of not guilty on his client’s behalf on Monday, Feb. 15. Shannon, a 27-year-old Holmes Beach resident, was charged in the hit-and-run death of 83-year-old Madelyn Dakin of Michigan. The case has been assigned to Judge Lon Arend.

Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer said the incident occurred just after 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 10 in the 2700 block of Gulf Drive in Holmes Beach, near the city’s southern border with Bradenton Beach. Dakin, a pedestrian, was struck by a vehicle and pronounced dead at the scene of the accident.

Holmes Beach police, assisted by the Bradenton Police Department’s traffic unit, investigated the incident. According to a probable cause affidavit provided by the HBPD, Shannon was charged with leaving the scene of an accident resulting in death.

The affidavit says Dakin was trying to cross Gulf Drive outside of a crosswalk when she was struck by Shannon’s vehicle, a 2006 silver Chevrolet Trailblazer, traveling south on Gulf Drive. The vehicle was identified by the city’s license plate reader cameras. Multiple witnesses say they saw a blonde woman in her 20s beside the victim, shaking her and asking for help before getting back in the vehicle and leaving the scene. Witnesses later identified Shannon as the woman at the scene from a photo lineup.

Local law enforcement launched a search to find Shannon and her vehicle. By the morning of Thursday, Feb. 11, a lawyer representing Shannon contacted police to give them the location of her vehicle and say that she would be surrendering to law enforcement.

The vehicle was located at 4535 119th St. W. in Cortez, near a trap yard at the FISH Preserve. It was impounded by police around 4 p.m. on Feb. 11 and determined to have front-end damage on the passenger side consistent with Dakin’s injuries.

By 4:45 p.m., Shannon had turned herself in to the Bradenton police and was charged in the crash. She was released from custody on Friday, Feb. 12 on a $15,000 bail bond with supervised release and ordered to not drink alcohol. Shannon was ordered to appear in Manatee County Criminal Traffic Court on Friday, March 5.

Tokajer said the investigation is ongoing and that police are seeking information from anyone who saw her or was with her before the crash or who has information on her activities before the incident to see if her actions earlier in the day were a determining factor as to why she left the scene.

According to Manatee County court records, Shannon was found guilty of driving under the influence in 2015 and was ordered to serve a year of probation, complete DUI school and pay a fine in place of community service hours.

Anyone with information on Shannon or the crash is asked to please contact Holmes Beach Det. Brian Hall at 941-932-6161 or email detective@holmesbeach.org. Information also can be emailed to BPDtips@bradentonpd.com. To remain anonymous, call Crime Stoppers at 1-866-634-8477 or send an anonymous tip electronically online.

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