DRIVER PERSONAL SAFETY - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 12
About This Presentation
Title:

DRIVER PERSONAL SAFETY

Description:

Mark Joseph Flitter was convicted in the case. ... Nathaniel Lee Jackson was convicted of first-degree murder. ... Purdie-Pagan was convicted of second-degree ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:420
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 13
Provided by: jimb179
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: DRIVER PERSONAL SAFETY


1
DRIVER PERSONALSAFETY
  • Introduction to Day 2
  • 21st Annual Conference of the
  • International Association of Transportation
    Regulators
  • September 16, 2008

2
DAY 2 AGENDA
  • 900-930 am Introduction to Driver Personal
    Safety 930-1015 am Presentation by NIOSH
    Project Proposal and a new safety device
    initiatives in North America
  • 1015-1030 am Break
  • 1030-1130 am Panel Discussion on Driver
    Personal Safety Initiatives

3
DAY 2 AGENDA Continued
  • 1130-1200 pm Enhancing the Profile of the IATR
  • 1200-100 pm Lunch (Seascapes Ballroom)
  • 115 pm Meet in Hotel Lobby for Bus to LAX
    Tour
  • 130 pm Bus departs for LAX Tour returns by
    400 pm
  • 400 700 pm Hospitality Suite Hosted by Hara
    and Associates (Suite 4057)

4
Day 2 Agenda Continued
  • 645 Meet in Lobby for Tour of Beverly Hills
  • Sign up with Denise if you would like a guided
    tour (additional 15.00)

5
Taxi Robberies
  • On Thursday, August 1, 2002, at approximately
    2140 hrs, the victim was operating a taxi cab
    and picked up a fare at the Food Basics store at
    Jane and Wilson. The lone suspect directed the
    victim to drive him to Finch and Weston. After
    telling the driver to make a few turns the cab
    arrived in front of 149 Habitant Drive. The
    suspect pulled a handgun out and placed it to the
    head of the driver and demanded cash. The driver
    complied and the suspect made good his escape.
  • Toronto-Crimestoppers

6
Robbery Location
7
Taxi Driver Deaths
ARIZONA DAILY STAR Tucson, Arizona Published
03.07.2008 Police worked to track down the last
fare of a Tucson taxicab driver on Thursday, a
day after he was found dead with a gunshot wound
in a Midtown alley. It was the 16th homicide in
Tucson this year. The cabbie, 27-year-old Timothy
Royce, was found about 1130 p.m. Wednesday in an
alley north of East Helen Street between North
Sixth and North Seventh avenues, said Sgt. Fabian
Pacheco, a Tucson Police Department spokesman.
8
Other Cab drivers killed or assaulted on the job
In Tucson include
  • November 1990 Vern Noland was kidnapped at
    gunpoint and forced to drive around for three
    hours.
  • February 1991 Cabdriver Ronald George Brown was
    shot and killed. William Pedersen and Gilbert
    Cardona were convicted of the crime.
  • March 1991 Yellow Cab Co. driver Dennis Reiley
    was kidnapped at gunpoint. He escaped when his
    attacker became distracted. Mark Joseph Flitter
    was convicted in the case.
  • February 1992 Cabdriver Eric Spivak was injured
    when his throat was cut during a scuffle with a
    would-be robber.
  • August 1992 Yellow Cab Co. driver Keith Riley
    was shot from just outside the cab and killed.
    Nathaniel Lee Jackson was convicted of
    first-degree murder.
  • November 2002 Troy A. Prather was shot and
    crashed his cab into concrete pylons, which
    caused the cab to catch fire. Prather died at
    University Medical Center. Ricardo Joaquin
    Purdie-Pagan was convicted of second-degree
    murder.

9
Taxi Licensing in Tucson, AZ
  • Tucson, Arizona Municipal Code Sec. 20-300. 
    Purpose
  • The purpose of this article is to promote the
    safety and general welfare of the public by
    regulating certain aspects of the taxicab
    business.
  • many cities regulate for this reason as well
  • who is looking out for the drivers needs?

10
Safety Initiatives in use
11
Safety Initiatives in use
12
How do you best deter victimization in the Taxi
Industry?
A range of measures, rather than one measure
alone is likely to be more successful. Policy
makers should be wary of responding to the size
of the problem in simplistic fashion posing a
single solution as a cure all. It can be taken
that the larger the problem, the more complex the
solution. Such is the case with victimization in
the taxi industry. Dr. Fiona Haines, Criminology
Department University of Melbourne
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com