Moped accident aftermath continues
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By Jimmy LaRoue
Published: August 18, 2008
A woman involved in a July 4 traffic accident that killed a moped driver was given the maximum sentence Monday in Waynesboro General District Court.
Nora Quezada, who drove without a Virginia driver’s license, received a 180-day jail sentence from Judge William D. Heatwole, citing the serious nature of the incident and that she was in the United States illegally.
Quezada, listed on the accident report as living at 38 Brandon Ladd Circle in Waynesboro, was heading north on North Delphine Avenue when a 2004 Yamaha moped driven by James Michael Baber, 50, turned south on North Delphine from Sixth Street and into the path of Quezada’s vehicle, a 2000 Ford Windstar, at about 10 p.m. July 4.
Baber was taken first to Augusta Medical Center in Fishersville and then airlifted to the University of Virginia Medical Center in Charlottesville, where he later died from his injuries.
Neither Quezada nor the two children in the vehicle with her suffered injuries as a result of the accident. She was not charged with any additional offenses related to the accident.
At the time of the accident, Quezada was driving 30 mph in a 35-mph zone, according to the police report.
Initially, police said Baber had suffered a severe head injury. However, Baber’s death certificate says the cause of death was multiple blunt force trauma. According to medical reports from Augusta Medical Center and U.Va., Baber, who was not wearing a helmet at the time of the accident, suffered severe injuries to his aorta, liver, pancreas, spleen and esophagus, but no injuries to his head.
After reports of the incident appeared in local newspapers citing head injuries in Baber’s death, the Waynesboro City Council passed a law requiring moped riders to wear helmets.
At the time of the accident, Waynesboro police said there was nothing at the accident scene to suggest alcohol had played a factor in the crash.
Baber’s sister, Debbie Arnold, as well as other members of his family, showed up in court.
After the hearing, Arnold expressed mixed feelings with the outcome, but said something needs to be done with people in the U.S. illegally.
“It has very much devastated us,” Arnold said.
She said that while Baber didn’t suffer any head injuries, she’s pleased that the City Council passed the helmet ordinance.
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