Hawktawk wrote:And there you go . 2 people died . He didn’t cause it and isn’t charged with causing it . He is a guy who showed up to a scene of horror and I’m not judging his reaction . He wasn’t at fault , he returned to the scene and got his story straight eventually . He wasn’t drunk unlike the college employee 27 years old 3 times the legal limit driving college students around in a university pool vehicle . That’s the character issue I’m concerned more about . The U of a Georgia should be sued out of existence for this .
They are dead because of the driver , not Carter . I won’t waste any more time on it other than to say been there done that being a young guy with a fast car . Also unfortunately awoke to a dead man laying on what was left of my dash . I’ll not judge anyones reactions to a fatal car crash . It will be fascinating to see what does happen to the young man’s stock in the draft and his career after .
I read a report Seattle had also inquired with Chicago about the first pick . Might be rumor but if so doesn’t that make pretty clear they are targeting a qb, perhaps a specific one . They might all be gone by 5 . I wouldn’t be shocked if Hooker Hendon went late first . It is pretty fun to be in the mix with a top 5 pick but hopefully the value is there.
“ Have you ever participated in a root cause analysis? We used to do them all the time at work. In it, you identify not only the root cause, but also contributing factors without which the occurrence would not have happened. It's like a perfect storm. Take one factor out of the equation, say no wind shear at 10k feet, and the hurricane doesn't form. Was the lack of wind shear the root cause of the hurricane? No, of course not. But if there had been high winds up high, it would not have formed.
In this case, if Carter was racing with the deceased driver, then he is a contributing factor without which the accident in all likelihood would not have happened. It takes two to Tango. No one to race, and the driver likely doesn't drive that fast.
Whether Carter gets charged or not IMO is irrelevant. What we already know is extremely concerning, that rather than do what he could to help his friends, he left them to die, likely because of a consciousness of guilt and fear of being implicated.[/quote]
One more time . As I or Bob or any other car guy would point out he’s got twice the horsepower . He’s a lead foot like always which caused tickets . She was the lead vehicle when she crashed . The only way he’s behind her is if he intentionally slowed down . He would have sucked the headlights out of that massive expedition, been miles ahead in short order if he was racing .
He was returning to campus in conjunction with a woman who is obliterated drunk . She decides it’s a race .
As a supercharged grand Cherokee owner I can confirm everyone wants to race . Every one of my fast cars someone wants to race .
When it’s a person driving a huge pool suv with half the power it’s not a race . He’s not charged in the deaths . He didn’t cause them , instigate them or anything of the sort . A blotto drunk U of Georgia employee is responsible for her death and another . Can’t charge dead people though.
It’s a senseless tragedy , avoidable had someone stopped what had to be a wasted staggering drunk from driving at all. At that BAC she may well have killed someone else . We have no idea how she drives normally , was she a speeder?
And you have no idea what Carter was thinking during his actions after seeing a buddy laying dead in the road after being ejected because the Georgia employee didn’t make sure his seatbelt was fastened . We’re all good at pointing the finger at a 22 year old young man . Don’t judge if you haven’t been there with what this was .
I would not use this as a reason to take the guy off the board . It might mature him in a good way . I would be more concerned about some of the work ethic stuff and poor conditioning .