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Posted by on June 24, 2008, 2:19 pm
> The brothers sped away from the cops at 100 per, one on a STOLEN
> cycle. =A0And these guys didn't deserve to DIE?
>
> They died horribly, I'm happy to say, in the manner in which many
> motorcycle nuts die -- SPEEDING BEYOND COMPREHENSION!
>
> But face it, moto-jerks ... the ONLY reason YOU infantile outlaws RIDE
> these things is so YOU CAN BREAK THE LAWS OF THE ROAD!
>
> So here's hoping many more of you nitwits kill yourselves this week.
> As long as you don't kill or maim others, I look upon your deaths as I
> do the daily shooting, stabbing, and OD deaths of drug users and
> dealers in our nations' ghettos!
>
> In fact, I always smile inwardly when I read or hear of another
> motorcyclist's death! =A0One less dimwit on the highway. =A0One less jerk
> on a screaming 140 dbl machine weaving crazily in and out of lanes,
> speeding past the "slow" law-abiders, waiting to cut another sucker
> off! =A0 No need to bother about stop signs and red lights, is there,
> pea-brains?
>
> No question -- the world is better off without ALL OF you!
>
> Check out THIS comedy! =A0 It made MY day!
>
> ------------------------
> "Motorcycle Ride Ends in Tragedy for Brothers"
>
> "Police Radar Shows Speeds of Up to 100 MPH Before Crashes Off an Exit
> Ramp in Baltimore"
>
> By Aaron C. Davis
> Washington Post Staff Writer
> Friday, June 20, 2008; B01
>
> The Heureaux brothers were riding motorcycles, heading north on
> Interstate 95 near Laurel, Maryland, when at speeds of nearly 100 mph
> they raced by a state police trooper armed with a radar gun.
>
> The trooper pulled his car out and turned on his lights, a state
> police spokesman said yesterday, describing the events of Sunday.
> About 16 miles later, Suky Amin Heureaux, 25, and Suky Shamin
> Heureaux, 24, died in nearly simultaneous crashes on an exit ramp in
> Baltimore.
>
> Today, in Prince George's County, a wake will be held for the
> brothers, one of whom was riding a stolen bike, police said. The
> service will be attended by family and friends from the Washington
> area's Dominican community, some of whom wonder whether the trooper
> chased the brothers, a contention police deny.
>
> "They tell me they were racing, that's all they tell me," Maximo
> Heureaux, 45, who shared his home in Landover with his sons, said of
> his limited contact with investigators. "I don't believe the police;
> nobody here believes the police. We all need to know what really
> happened."
>
> Sgt. Arthur Betts, a police spokesman, denied that there was a chase
> and said the trooper, James Davis, appears to have followed state
> police policies.
>
> "This all could have been prevented if they had stopped," Betts said
> of the brothers. "The trooper didn't do anything to make them crash
> their motorcycles."
>
> Police declined to released the agency's pursuit policy yesterday,
> saying the agency must receive a mailed written request before doing
> so. Betts, however, said that unlike in many area jurisdictions that
> only allow police to pursue felony suspects, Maryland state troopers
> are allowed to chase traffic violators.
>
> The issue has special resonance in the Maryland suburbs. Last year, a
> Prince George's County police officer's pursuit of a motorcyclist on
> the Capital Beltway led to a fatal seven-car pileup; the officer has
> been indicted on two counts of vehicular manslaughter.
>
> Betts said Davis clocked three bikers traveling north at about 100 mph
> near the exit to Maryland Route 32. Betts said Davis pulled his car
> onto the highway, two bikers pulled over, and what he thought was one
> biker -- it turned out to be two -- kept going.
>
> Davis did not stop to write a ticket. Davis tried to "catch up" with
> the remaining biker but did not chase him, Betts said. Davis did not
> request permission to initiate a high-speed pursuit, which would have
> required a supervisor's approval, Betts said.
>
> Betts declined to release Davis's maximum speed. He said Davis only
> lost sight of the biker at the entrance to the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel
> on Interstate 895 in Baltimore, shortly before the crashes Sunday.
>
> With the brothers that day was Pedro Gervacio, 31, who was the lead
> rider as the three neared Route 32. Gervacio said a fourth motorcycle
> had been with the group, but he was not sure if the rider was with the
> group when they passed the police car.
>
> At the tunnel's toll plaza, Davis stopped to see whether cameras
> recorded the bike's license plates. The brothers crashed after exiting
> the tunnel; each was thrown off an elevated highway as he attempted to
> negotiate the off-ramp to Holabird Avenue.
>
> Friends of the brothers, both of whom were fathers, said they probably
> fled because they had recently learned from a friend that one of the
> bikes, bought this spring from an acquaintance, had been reported
> stolen. Suky Shamin also might have been driving with a suspended
> license, court records show.
>
> Gervacio said he saw the police car, lifted his right arm and tapped
> the top of his helmet, a signal to the others that an officer was
> ahead. They slowed, Gervacio said, and he did not see the trooper
> leave his post. More than three miles later, however, Gervacio said he
> looked in his rear-view mirror and saw the trooper closing fast with
> his lights and sirens on.
>
> Gervacio said he pulled over, but the brothers kept going north on
> I-95, faster than they had when they first passed the police officer
> at the side of the road. Gervacio said the trooper also was clearly
> chasing both brothers at that point. He estimated that the cruiser was
> five car lengths behind the two bikes.
>
> "That's the last time I saw any of them," Gervacio said.
>
> Several minutes later, an employee at a trucking company at the base
> of Holabird exit heard the crash and called police after he saw a
> black helmet rolling down the exit ramp. The police were not far
> behind, he said.
>
> "When I was on the phone, I could hear the sirens," said the employee,
> who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he said he had a prior
> criminal record and feared retaliation by police.
>
> The body of Suky Shamin traveled 150 feet beyond the elevated ramp
> before landing near a railroad line. The body of Suky Amin was found
> below the ramp.
>
> For Maximo Heureaux, an employee of the Maryland-National Capital
> Parks and Planning Commission, the deaths ended a link that he said
> went with the nickname he had bestowed on both sons. As a young child
> in the Dominican Republic, Maximo said he was known for yelling "Suky"
> when he saw neighborhood boys riding Suzukis by his parents' home.
>
> "It was my lucky nickname," he said. "I gave it to both of them."
>
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/19/AR200...
it would be a shame to not respond to this in accordance with the tone
taken against the 2 brothers that lost their life. but i will
retrain. one would wonder if the author has ever done anything
outside the norm or even maybe taken a chance to live outside of ANY
rules or boundaries. i am sure he has, but yet he sits on a high
pedistal and passes judgement on others. shame shame. who is he to
smile at the death of anyone? with such a calous posting i know
exactly who he is, one of these bitter, straight edged, the world is
wrong, i am right, do-gooders. did he stop to think that in their
youth these two might have merely made an error in judgement? i bet
he won't even acknowledge that it is a loss of life, period, and in
that alone it is sad. or the fact that they both left behind
children, and they were both truly beloved sons themselves, mostly
known for there playful nature and amazing sense of humor. they were
amazing friends and fathers. and he remarks as if he even had the
right. their funeral drew nerely 600 friends and families, how man
people will attend his, i venture to guess not nearly as many. it is
bitter people like this who make light of tragedy that in the end
blame everyone else for how tragically lonely their lives are, and
this is the way they lash out. i knew both brothers, and i can tell
you about a million other instances of their lives which would outline
why they did not deserve this. i hope the author prays that karma for
such bitter existance is not as swiff and brutal as i would be if i
met him in the street saying these words about my 2 friends.
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