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#1
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09-27-2012, 10:14 AM
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Gayane Zokhrabov
A court in Illinois has ruled that a man who died after being hit by a train when crossing the tracks at the station of the Metro in Chicago is responsible for injuries caused to a passerby once one of the parts of your body the golperara and cause serious injury, as reported by the Los Angeles Times newspaper. In 2008, Hiroyuki Joho, aged 18, was running in the rain with an umbrella over his head, trying to take the metro, when he was hit by a train. Several witnesses said that he was smiling while the train hit him. A large part of his body flew over the platform to the South, and struck with force to Gayane Zokhrabov, 58. The impact made him fall to the ground and knocked the leg and wrist, in addition to injure the shoulder. A Cook County judge dismissed the claim against the deceased, arguing that the man could not have foreseen the injury causing his death. However, the Court of appeals did not agree. Noting that the jurisprudence involving "flying bodies" is low, found that "it was reasonably foreseeable" that the high speed train kill Joho and would throw his body into a platform where people was waiting for the subway. Lawyer Leslie Rosen, who defended the injured woman, said that although the circumstances were "very peculiar and bloody and shocking", it was a case of simple negligence. "If you do something as stupid as this man did, have to hold you responsible for what you can cause". Before After I do not have a picture of the woman who tried suing this "dead man" for the injuries he caused to her when his body went flying throughout the train station hitting her. She received a broken wrist and leg due to his bad timing incident. Yes, it was a woman who was injured. The article says, "him" a lot but the translator must be confused. The article claims it is him but it doesn't look like anything was detached from him. At least I don't think so and supposedly his body parts |
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#9
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09-27-2012, 02:26 PM
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Re: Gayane Zokhrabov
Don't get too excited yet! Your sweet hope in the sanity of humanity is unfortunately dashed... "However, the Court of appeals did not agree. Noting that the jurisprudence involving "flying bodies" is low, found that "it was reasonably foreseeable" that the high speed train kill Joho and would throw his body into a platform where people was waiting for the subway." |