Ken's Accident & Life Lessons
Posted: Tue Mar 20, 2007 1:42 am
Why do bad things happen to Sexy People?? Kidding aside, my life was nearly taken and forever changed while I was walking on the sidewalk with my father. I have used this accident to grow as a person and my complete recovery and many lessons I learned came about from having an unwavering belief in self that I would become wiser and stronger from this tragedy. I hope the lessons I learned from my accident assist you in living the life you want. My goal is to be a mirror to reflect your own brilliance.
The story of my accident is so bizarre and horrific (as you will read) made national news and was written about in USA Today and broadcast over CNN and other national news channels.
The Survivor
On the morning of August 17, 1998, my life was going amazingly well. I had graduated from law school at Berkeley and recently taken and assuredly passed the California Bar Exam. At twenty-six years old, I had accomplished many goals and was soon to start a lucrative legal career. In one month, I would be moving to Palo Alto, California, and commence employment as a Trademark and Copyright attorney at the prestigious Silicon Valley law firm of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati (“WSGR”). And best of all, I had a long vacation in Boca Raton, paid for mainly by my signing bonus from WSGR, to relax and visit with my family and friends.
Whenever I returned home, one of the most enjoyable things I did was take long walks with my father. Both our walks and conversations were stimulating and invigorating, and we steadily grew closer together. Thus, when my father suggested that we go for a walk on the afternoon of August 17th, I enthusiastically jumped at the chance to join him in this beloved activity.
It was a beautiful and sunny summer afternoon. Our walks generally consisted of going through residential neighborhoods, but also involved a short distance where we would walk along a busy street, Yamato Road. I never felt concerned for my safety because we always walked on the sidewalk, which is separated from the street by a twelve-foot grassy divide. This false sense of security was soon to be shattered during that walk, along with my leg, arm, previous life, and anticipated future.
While walking on the sidewalk adjacent to Yamato Road, my father and I became deeply engaged in our conversation. We were discussing my upcoming move to Palo Alto and joining the law firm. While I still planned on becoming a philosopher in the future, I was excited by the prospect of applying trademark and copyright law to the Internet for a period in my life and the new experiences it would bring.
Within a second and without warning, my life changed. Behind us, a car traveling over forty miles per hour veered off the road and, without any braking, slammed into my right leg. The force of the car catapulted my body upward and ripped me out of my shoes. I was launched above the hood of the car. My right shoulder and upper arm crashed through the windshield, breaking the humerus bone in my right arm in the process. My body landed, contorted and mangled, half in and half out of the moving vehicle. My head and upper body were wedged against the passenger seat while my legs were painfully sprawled out over the hood of the car.
I instantly went from walking with my father to feeling the most extreme and searing pain I have ever felt. I screamed in agony, “Oh my God! Oh my God!” as an immeasurable pain pulsed through my body in waves. Through my teary eyes and horrified screams, I looked at my throbbing leg and saw it twisted in an unnatural and hideous position while surrounded by broken glass from the windshield. I also saw clouds darting along in front of me and realized that somehow I was moving. Unable to understand, I continued to scream “Oh my God! Oh my God!” I stopped screaming when, through the haze of pain I felt new stabs of intense hurt. Looking upward and to my left, I saw a fist from above showering blows upon my contorted body. Unable to understand, I begged the driver “Help me! What are you doing? Please help me!”
In answer to my pleas, the punches only came faster and harder. I pulled myself into the car with what uninjured muscles were still functioning.
I then looked to where the blows were coming from and will never forget the eyes of my attacker. They were so dilated and bloodshot that I immediately knew he must have been under the influence of mind-altering drugs. His brown eyes glared at me with an animalistic hatred in between darting glances ahead at the cars he was dashing past. His face was drenched in sweat.
Many blows to my face interrupted my quick glance. He repeatedly hit me with his right fist and weaved through traffic with his left hand. I instinctively raised my left arm to shield my body from the force of his attack.
While attacking me he screamed, “Get Out! Get Out!” in a guttural, life-threatening voice. Attempting to block his punches, I tried to prevent him from pushing me out of the speeding car.
I begged him repeatedly, “Stop the car, I’m hurt, I’m hurt! Help me! Let me out!” He only beat me harder and continually screamed, “Get out! Get out!” He pummeled and yelled at me for several interminable minutes as I battled for my life.
Continuously beating me, he drove erratically around other cars. He then veered into a gated community and smashed through their barricade. Making a quick U-turn, he went back onto Yamato road and ran a red light. He then hopped a curb and drove on to another street where he continued beating me while yelling at me to “Get out!”
Then he started to slow the car down and I looked ahead. Several cars waiting for a red light blocked all lanes of traffic and my attacker could not drive around them. I fervently renewed my pleas of “stop the car” and to “let me out.”
He quickly swerved right so that his car was barely off the road and abutting the grass median. Once stopped, I immediately tried to get out, but could not open the door with my right arm, which was badly broken. Using my left arm, I pulled the door latch and was able to barely open the door and began frantically trying to escape from his car. But because both my right arm and leg were badly broken I could not leave his car. He then violently pushed me out of the car, with my broken arm violently slamming against the car door and the ground.
He then backed the car up for a second and I thought he was going to run me over. Then squealing his wheels as the car lurched forward, he jumped the road’s concrete median and sped off in the other direction.
Lying painfully on the grass beside the road, I waved my one good arm in the air, and yelled, “Help me! Help me!” as convoys of several cars streamed past me. So many cars drove by me, not noticing me, or perhaps afraid to get involved in such a bloody attack. I did not know that many witnesses to my accident had already called 911.
Now that I was out of immediate danger, I slowly writhed with an unbelievable and unbearable pain that was running through the right side of my body. I looked at my right arm and saw that it was pulled backwards and dangling limply. My first thought was that I would never be able to write again. I realized at this early moment that my life had changed forever.
I then saw a man park his car on the other side of the street and run up to me with a cellular phone in his hand.
“I’ve called the police,” he said.
I frantically uttered, “My father was also hit by the car! Tell the police to look for him!”
I heard approaching sirens in the background. Two policemen arrived at the scene and asked me to describe what had happened.
“I was walking with my father on the sidewalk and was then hit by a car. I think my father was hit, too. The driver of the car beat me while I was inside the car and finally let me out here.”
After hearing this outrageous story, the questioning officer drew away from me and then quietly whispered to his partner, “He’s in shock.”
Hearing his disbelief, I responded, “No, I was walking with my father on the sidewalk along Yamato Road, we were hit by a car, the driver beat me while I was inside the car, and he finally let me out of the car here.”
At that moment, the officers received word of a 911 call from my father reporting the accident. They then realized that I was the accident victim who had been hit on Yamato Road. That I had been beaten and held captive for over three miles before being pushed out here. I was relieved upon finding that my father was alive and not badly injured.
As the police were questioning me, the paramedics came and began cutting through my clothes to examine and dress my wounds. The paramedics initially thought I had been stabbed, with one of my many wounds piercing several inches into my body and resembling a knife wound. This deep wound, near my right hip and groin area, was the reason I was taken to Delray Medical Center (which has an excellent trauma unit) over the closer Boca Raton Hospital. This choice of hospitals is what later allowed my attacker to be identified and caught.
That ambulance ride to the hospital was excruciating; every bump in the road caused a red-hot pain to flare up all over the right side of my body. The pain in my body was exacerbated by the fears in my mind. Would I ever be able to walk again? Would I ever be able to write with a pen or type a legal brief? My thoughts were a world apart from the optimistic thoughts with which I began that walk.
My fearful concerns were continually interrupted by the paramedics’ constant body probing and questioning. My body was again pierced, this time by several intravenous needles. Every maneuvering and inspection of my body was a fresh torture.
To their surprise, the paramedics found that I never went into shock. Perhaps it was my knowing that I was facing a life or death situation and my instinct of self-preservation had triumphed over the fear. Or maybe my past experience dealing with the trauma and grief from my sister’s death prepared me for this tragedy. Either way (and unfortunately), I can never forget being attacked and beaten by my assailant.
I feel more sorry for my father than myself, for he had to witness his only surviving child being run down while walking alongside him. Like myself, my father had no warning of the car approaching from behind. According to witnesses, the car was going forty miles per hour and did not break at all before it hit us.
We were walking side by side, and then my father felt a powerful push on his leg, as the car tire brushed against his leg and left a road rash scrape. Knowing I had been hit, my father looked all around for my thrown body. My father uses the term “body” when describing that moment, because he feared and felt that I was probably dead. Not finding my body, my father quickly looked ahead and saw the car speeding along on the sidewalk before darting back to the road. Seeing one of my legs sticking out of the car, my father ran after the car but soon realized that my attacker was not stopping and that he would never catch up.
Looking backwards, my father then waved down an approaching city bus whose driver had seen the whole accident. The bus driver and my father chased after the car and my body, not knowing whether I was alive or dead. Because my attacker was weaving in and out of traffic and ran a red light, the bus driver could not keep up the pursuit. My father then told the bus driver to drop him off on the side of the road.
Unable to quickly locate a phone booth, my father ran into a large office building occupied by Bell South, the local telephone provider. My exhausted father asked the receptionist if he could call 911.
“Is this an emergency?” she questioned.
“Yes!” She quickly handed the phone over to my father who urgently called 911 to report the accident.
Apprehension of My Attacker
When my attacker finally pushed me out of the car, he sped away from where he left me to escape capture. My attacker then pulled into a parking lot and discarded incriminating evidence in a grassy area adjoining the parking lot. This evidence was later found, and it was learned that he had discarded several weapons, including an 18-inch machete, a bloody baseball bat, and a billy club. Additionally, he threw away my sun visor, now covered in blood, which had landed in his car. Then, he attempted to destroy the most damning evidence of the attack, his car that now had a shattered windshield and blood all over the interior. He drove the car down a boat launch ramp and submerged it into the Intracoastal Waterway. Getting soaked in the process, he then stripped down to his underwear and sneakers, and ran away from his car. While initially fully immersed, the car was later discovered jutting out of the water during the next low tide and was hoisted out of the water by the police.
Bleeding from wounds caused by flying glass shards from the broken windshield and running away from his submerged car clothed only in his underwear, a call concerning a suspicious-looking and wounded person was received by the paramedics and Delray Beach police. Finding my attacker hiding in an alley, the paramedics dressed his wounds. Under direction from the police, the paramedics then fortuitously took him to the same hospital that I had been taken to, Delray Medical Center.
The Boca Raton Police, who were at the hospital interviewing my father and me about the accident, heard from the Delray Beach Police about a recently admitted patient who perfectly fit the description of my attacker and also had wounds caused by broken glass. The Boca Raton police were immediately suspicious and became more so while questioning my attacker about his whereabouts earlier that day.
They then asked me to view this potential suspect and to either positively or negatively identify him. Because the last time I saw my attacker he was irrational and repeatedly beating me, I demanded that the suspect be securely tied down before I identified him.
The police wheeled my gurney next to the suspect’s gurney, to which he was strapped down. Upon first sight, there was a moment of mutual recognition, after which he wildly writhed in his gurney, knowing that he had been caught. No words were exchanged between us, but some healing inside myself had already begun.
Based upon my positive identification of my attacker, description of his actions, and the paramedics’ suspicion that my attacker was on narcotics, the police took a sample of his blood and tested it for drugs. This test detected evidence of his being under the influence of the drug Ketamine, also known as “Special K,” a powerful anesthetic used for veterinary surgeries. Additionally, the test found that he was also under the influence of the drug Ecstasy. A urine sample was also taken which showed positive results for amphetamines and cannabinoids. After his wounds were properly treated, my attacker was transported to jail.
Knowledge of my assailant’s identity, Adam B., and the license plate number of his car, showed that he had been arrested only two days earlier for the felony charge of possession of over twenty grams of marijuana, possession of marijuana with intent to sell, and possession of drug paraphernalia.
I later learned the following information from police reports and Adam B.’s deposition, both of which I take the following quotes from. Considering B.’s actions during the 48 hours previous to my accident, it seems inevitable that he would have hurt either himself or another.
Apparently, two days before hitting me B. accosted two juveniles and asked whether they wanted to buy any “Ecstasy,” “beaners,” or “rolls” - slang terms for illicit drugs. A friend then told B. that police were in the area and he fled on foot while the juveniles flagged down the police officer. When B. later returned, the police searched his car and found over thirty-one grams of marijuana, a syringe and needle, a measuring scale, and plastic baggies. Although arrested for a felony charge and having had his car impounded on that Saturday night, he was released on Sunday and given back possession of his car.
Learning little from his arrest, B. took Ecstasy and Ketamine on Sunday night and went to a nightclub until 6:00 A.M. Monday morning. He then proceeded to an after-hours party until 1:00 P.M., only three hours before he hit me. With no sleep over the last four days, B. then proceeded to pick up his impounded car and attend a court ordered drug-counseling session while admittedly “very high” from the mind altering combination of Ketamine and Ecstasy. He then drove for a long period, noticing that the drugs were still very much in his system and “disorienting” him. B. then claimed he “blacked out and lost control of (his) vehicle. The next thing I knew, I was in the hospital.”
My attorney found this alleged blackout to be wholly inconsistent with all of B.’s well thought out efforts to destroy evidence and elude the police after pushing me out of his car. Thus, he asked my attacker, “Were you aware that Ken DeLeon was somersaulted over the front of your vehicle as a pedestrian on the side of the road and crashed through your right windshield upside down … [and] that you continued to pound on him with your… right hand as you drove down the street?”
B. replied, “This is what they tell me, sir. But I’m not sure how much of it I believe. He is a lawyer. He’s fairly smart.”
My next post will discuss my recovery in the hospital and the beginning of the life lessons I learned from my accident.
The story of my accident is so bizarre and horrific (as you will read) made national news and was written about in USA Today and broadcast over CNN and other national news channels.
The Survivor
On the morning of August 17, 1998, my life was going amazingly well. I had graduated from law school at Berkeley and recently taken and assuredly passed the California Bar Exam. At twenty-six years old, I had accomplished many goals and was soon to start a lucrative legal career. In one month, I would be moving to Palo Alto, California, and commence employment as a Trademark and Copyright attorney at the prestigious Silicon Valley law firm of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati (“WSGR”). And best of all, I had a long vacation in Boca Raton, paid for mainly by my signing bonus from WSGR, to relax and visit with my family and friends.
Whenever I returned home, one of the most enjoyable things I did was take long walks with my father. Both our walks and conversations were stimulating and invigorating, and we steadily grew closer together. Thus, when my father suggested that we go for a walk on the afternoon of August 17th, I enthusiastically jumped at the chance to join him in this beloved activity.
It was a beautiful and sunny summer afternoon. Our walks generally consisted of going through residential neighborhoods, but also involved a short distance where we would walk along a busy street, Yamato Road. I never felt concerned for my safety because we always walked on the sidewalk, which is separated from the street by a twelve-foot grassy divide. This false sense of security was soon to be shattered during that walk, along with my leg, arm, previous life, and anticipated future.
While walking on the sidewalk adjacent to Yamato Road, my father and I became deeply engaged in our conversation. We were discussing my upcoming move to Palo Alto and joining the law firm. While I still planned on becoming a philosopher in the future, I was excited by the prospect of applying trademark and copyright law to the Internet for a period in my life and the new experiences it would bring.
Within a second and without warning, my life changed. Behind us, a car traveling over forty miles per hour veered off the road and, without any braking, slammed into my right leg. The force of the car catapulted my body upward and ripped me out of my shoes. I was launched above the hood of the car. My right shoulder and upper arm crashed through the windshield, breaking the humerus bone in my right arm in the process. My body landed, contorted and mangled, half in and half out of the moving vehicle. My head and upper body were wedged against the passenger seat while my legs were painfully sprawled out over the hood of the car.
I instantly went from walking with my father to feeling the most extreme and searing pain I have ever felt. I screamed in agony, “Oh my God! Oh my God!” as an immeasurable pain pulsed through my body in waves. Through my teary eyes and horrified screams, I looked at my throbbing leg and saw it twisted in an unnatural and hideous position while surrounded by broken glass from the windshield. I also saw clouds darting along in front of me and realized that somehow I was moving. Unable to understand, I continued to scream “Oh my God! Oh my God!” I stopped screaming when, through the haze of pain I felt new stabs of intense hurt. Looking upward and to my left, I saw a fist from above showering blows upon my contorted body. Unable to understand, I begged the driver “Help me! What are you doing? Please help me!”
In answer to my pleas, the punches only came faster and harder. I pulled myself into the car with what uninjured muscles were still functioning.
I then looked to where the blows were coming from and will never forget the eyes of my attacker. They were so dilated and bloodshot that I immediately knew he must have been under the influence of mind-altering drugs. His brown eyes glared at me with an animalistic hatred in between darting glances ahead at the cars he was dashing past. His face was drenched in sweat.
Many blows to my face interrupted my quick glance. He repeatedly hit me with his right fist and weaved through traffic with his left hand. I instinctively raised my left arm to shield my body from the force of his attack.
While attacking me he screamed, “Get Out! Get Out!” in a guttural, life-threatening voice. Attempting to block his punches, I tried to prevent him from pushing me out of the speeding car.
I begged him repeatedly, “Stop the car, I’m hurt, I’m hurt! Help me! Let me out!” He only beat me harder and continually screamed, “Get out! Get out!” He pummeled and yelled at me for several interminable minutes as I battled for my life.
Continuously beating me, he drove erratically around other cars. He then veered into a gated community and smashed through their barricade. Making a quick U-turn, he went back onto Yamato road and ran a red light. He then hopped a curb and drove on to another street where he continued beating me while yelling at me to “Get out!”
Then he started to slow the car down and I looked ahead. Several cars waiting for a red light blocked all lanes of traffic and my attacker could not drive around them. I fervently renewed my pleas of “stop the car” and to “let me out.”
He quickly swerved right so that his car was barely off the road and abutting the grass median. Once stopped, I immediately tried to get out, but could not open the door with my right arm, which was badly broken. Using my left arm, I pulled the door latch and was able to barely open the door and began frantically trying to escape from his car. But because both my right arm and leg were badly broken I could not leave his car. He then violently pushed me out of the car, with my broken arm violently slamming against the car door and the ground.
He then backed the car up for a second and I thought he was going to run me over. Then squealing his wheels as the car lurched forward, he jumped the road’s concrete median and sped off in the other direction.
Lying painfully on the grass beside the road, I waved my one good arm in the air, and yelled, “Help me! Help me!” as convoys of several cars streamed past me. So many cars drove by me, not noticing me, or perhaps afraid to get involved in such a bloody attack. I did not know that many witnesses to my accident had already called 911.
Now that I was out of immediate danger, I slowly writhed with an unbelievable and unbearable pain that was running through the right side of my body. I looked at my right arm and saw that it was pulled backwards and dangling limply. My first thought was that I would never be able to write again. I realized at this early moment that my life had changed forever.
I then saw a man park his car on the other side of the street and run up to me with a cellular phone in his hand.
“I’ve called the police,” he said.
I frantically uttered, “My father was also hit by the car! Tell the police to look for him!”
I heard approaching sirens in the background. Two policemen arrived at the scene and asked me to describe what had happened.
“I was walking with my father on the sidewalk and was then hit by a car. I think my father was hit, too. The driver of the car beat me while I was inside the car and finally let me out here.”
After hearing this outrageous story, the questioning officer drew away from me and then quietly whispered to his partner, “He’s in shock.”
Hearing his disbelief, I responded, “No, I was walking with my father on the sidewalk along Yamato Road, we were hit by a car, the driver beat me while I was inside the car, and he finally let me out of the car here.”
At that moment, the officers received word of a 911 call from my father reporting the accident. They then realized that I was the accident victim who had been hit on Yamato Road. That I had been beaten and held captive for over three miles before being pushed out here. I was relieved upon finding that my father was alive and not badly injured.
As the police were questioning me, the paramedics came and began cutting through my clothes to examine and dress my wounds. The paramedics initially thought I had been stabbed, with one of my many wounds piercing several inches into my body and resembling a knife wound. This deep wound, near my right hip and groin area, was the reason I was taken to Delray Medical Center (which has an excellent trauma unit) over the closer Boca Raton Hospital. This choice of hospitals is what later allowed my attacker to be identified and caught.
That ambulance ride to the hospital was excruciating; every bump in the road caused a red-hot pain to flare up all over the right side of my body. The pain in my body was exacerbated by the fears in my mind. Would I ever be able to walk again? Would I ever be able to write with a pen or type a legal brief? My thoughts were a world apart from the optimistic thoughts with which I began that walk.
My fearful concerns were continually interrupted by the paramedics’ constant body probing and questioning. My body was again pierced, this time by several intravenous needles. Every maneuvering and inspection of my body was a fresh torture.
To their surprise, the paramedics found that I never went into shock. Perhaps it was my knowing that I was facing a life or death situation and my instinct of self-preservation had triumphed over the fear. Or maybe my past experience dealing with the trauma and grief from my sister’s death prepared me for this tragedy. Either way (and unfortunately), I can never forget being attacked and beaten by my assailant.
I feel more sorry for my father than myself, for he had to witness his only surviving child being run down while walking alongside him. Like myself, my father had no warning of the car approaching from behind. According to witnesses, the car was going forty miles per hour and did not break at all before it hit us.
We were walking side by side, and then my father felt a powerful push on his leg, as the car tire brushed against his leg and left a road rash scrape. Knowing I had been hit, my father looked all around for my thrown body. My father uses the term “body” when describing that moment, because he feared and felt that I was probably dead. Not finding my body, my father quickly looked ahead and saw the car speeding along on the sidewalk before darting back to the road. Seeing one of my legs sticking out of the car, my father ran after the car but soon realized that my attacker was not stopping and that he would never catch up.
Looking backwards, my father then waved down an approaching city bus whose driver had seen the whole accident. The bus driver and my father chased after the car and my body, not knowing whether I was alive or dead. Because my attacker was weaving in and out of traffic and ran a red light, the bus driver could not keep up the pursuit. My father then told the bus driver to drop him off on the side of the road.
Unable to quickly locate a phone booth, my father ran into a large office building occupied by Bell South, the local telephone provider. My exhausted father asked the receptionist if he could call 911.
“Is this an emergency?” she questioned.
“Yes!” She quickly handed the phone over to my father who urgently called 911 to report the accident.
Apprehension of My Attacker
When my attacker finally pushed me out of the car, he sped away from where he left me to escape capture. My attacker then pulled into a parking lot and discarded incriminating evidence in a grassy area adjoining the parking lot. This evidence was later found, and it was learned that he had discarded several weapons, including an 18-inch machete, a bloody baseball bat, and a billy club. Additionally, he threw away my sun visor, now covered in blood, which had landed in his car. Then, he attempted to destroy the most damning evidence of the attack, his car that now had a shattered windshield and blood all over the interior. He drove the car down a boat launch ramp and submerged it into the Intracoastal Waterway. Getting soaked in the process, he then stripped down to his underwear and sneakers, and ran away from his car. While initially fully immersed, the car was later discovered jutting out of the water during the next low tide and was hoisted out of the water by the police.
Bleeding from wounds caused by flying glass shards from the broken windshield and running away from his submerged car clothed only in his underwear, a call concerning a suspicious-looking and wounded person was received by the paramedics and Delray Beach police. Finding my attacker hiding in an alley, the paramedics dressed his wounds. Under direction from the police, the paramedics then fortuitously took him to the same hospital that I had been taken to, Delray Medical Center.
The Boca Raton Police, who were at the hospital interviewing my father and me about the accident, heard from the Delray Beach Police about a recently admitted patient who perfectly fit the description of my attacker and also had wounds caused by broken glass. The Boca Raton police were immediately suspicious and became more so while questioning my attacker about his whereabouts earlier that day.
They then asked me to view this potential suspect and to either positively or negatively identify him. Because the last time I saw my attacker he was irrational and repeatedly beating me, I demanded that the suspect be securely tied down before I identified him.
The police wheeled my gurney next to the suspect’s gurney, to which he was strapped down. Upon first sight, there was a moment of mutual recognition, after which he wildly writhed in his gurney, knowing that he had been caught. No words were exchanged between us, but some healing inside myself had already begun.
Based upon my positive identification of my attacker, description of his actions, and the paramedics’ suspicion that my attacker was on narcotics, the police took a sample of his blood and tested it for drugs. This test detected evidence of his being under the influence of the drug Ketamine, also known as “Special K,” a powerful anesthetic used for veterinary surgeries. Additionally, the test found that he was also under the influence of the drug Ecstasy. A urine sample was also taken which showed positive results for amphetamines and cannabinoids. After his wounds were properly treated, my attacker was transported to jail.
Knowledge of my assailant’s identity, Adam B., and the license plate number of his car, showed that he had been arrested only two days earlier for the felony charge of possession of over twenty grams of marijuana, possession of marijuana with intent to sell, and possession of drug paraphernalia.
I later learned the following information from police reports and Adam B.’s deposition, both of which I take the following quotes from. Considering B.’s actions during the 48 hours previous to my accident, it seems inevitable that he would have hurt either himself or another.
Apparently, two days before hitting me B. accosted two juveniles and asked whether they wanted to buy any “Ecstasy,” “beaners,” or “rolls” - slang terms for illicit drugs. A friend then told B. that police were in the area and he fled on foot while the juveniles flagged down the police officer. When B. later returned, the police searched his car and found over thirty-one grams of marijuana, a syringe and needle, a measuring scale, and plastic baggies. Although arrested for a felony charge and having had his car impounded on that Saturday night, he was released on Sunday and given back possession of his car.
Learning little from his arrest, B. took Ecstasy and Ketamine on Sunday night and went to a nightclub until 6:00 A.M. Monday morning. He then proceeded to an after-hours party until 1:00 P.M., only three hours before he hit me. With no sleep over the last four days, B. then proceeded to pick up his impounded car and attend a court ordered drug-counseling session while admittedly “very high” from the mind altering combination of Ketamine and Ecstasy. He then drove for a long period, noticing that the drugs were still very much in his system and “disorienting” him. B. then claimed he “blacked out and lost control of (his) vehicle. The next thing I knew, I was in the hospital.”
My attorney found this alleged blackout to be wholly inconsistent with all of B.’s well thought out efforts to destroy evidence and elude the police after pushing me out of his car. Thus, he asked my attacker, “Were you aware that Ken DeLeon was somersaulted over the front of your vehicle as a pedestrian on the side of the road and crashed through your right windshield upside down … [and] that you continued to pound on him with your… right hand as you drove down the street?”
B. replied, “This is what they tell me, sir. But I’m not sure how much of it I believe. He is a lawyer. He’s fairly smart.”
My next post will discuss my recovery in the hospital and the beginning of the life lessons I learned from my accident.