Baltimore Officer Anthony Byrd was a victim of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Officer Byrd was en route to the station house when his patrol car was struck by another patrol car responding to a domestic disturbance call. He was subsequently transported to a local hospital where he succumbed to his injuries.
Gary, Ind., Police Officer Benjamin Wilcher also succumbed to injuries sustained when his patrol car collided with another patrol car, this time during a vehicle pursuit. Again, it was an intersection that played a pivotal role in the collision.
It's not just our own we have to worry about. "Emergency vehicles" includes fire and ambulance vehicles, as well. A Georgia police officer died of injuries sustained when his patrol car collided with an ambulance while both were responding to a murder scene.
I've chewed ass on deputies that I've caught pushing the envelope. I recognized their inordinate pride in anticipating problems and having excellent reaction time when they occurred, and knew that these deputies were destined for rude wakeup calls in the form of traffic collisions. It wasn't piety that prompted me. No, I knew this because I'd been guilty of the same stupid, arrogant ignorance that found me over-driving, crashing, and getting my otherwise uninjured hand bitch-slapped.
Unless they're bucking for a duty-related retirement, officers rarely decide to have an accident. Usually, it's due to some unanticipated factor: oil on the roadway, a signal that changes sooner than they anticipated, and yes, the blind intersection that didn't allow them to see as far as they needed to avoid a collision.