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Teh One Who Knocks
01-04-2018, 12:40 PM
Mark McGreal, UCLA - The College Fix


https://i.imgur.com/IHoK41w.jpg

The University of California-San Diego is now embroiled in a personal injury lawsuit after an election protest gone wrong.

Mariana Flores, a sophomore at UCSD, was demonstrating against Donald Trump’s victory on a busy San Diego freeway when a vehicle hit her. The accident crushed her pelvis, fractured her leg, and caused other serious injuries, reported The Guardian campus newspaper.

Flores, in her suit filed in late November, partly blames campus officials for her injury, arguing they should have stopped the protest before it got dangerous, according to news reports.
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Flores’ attorney did not respond to requests from The College Fix seeking comment. A UC San Diego spokesperson said that the university could not comment on pending litigation.

The Nov. 2016 protest had began at “Library Walk” and journeyed through campus. Next, demonstrators ended up on the I-5, a very large and busy eight-laned freeway that cuts through San Diego.

The car that stuck Flores had gotten around an emergency vehicle that had been attempting to block traffic so authorities could shut down the freeway, according to the Los Angeles Times.

In an interview with The Guardian, Gene Sullivan, Flores’s lawyer, asserted that the university planned, organized and knew the protest was happening for hours and did nothing to stop it.

“According to Sullivan, not doing anything and failing to act is legally the same thing as supporting the protest,” the newspaper reported. “Sullivan further alleged that the protest was encouraged by people in positions of authority at the university, and that ‘if anyone that is in authority with the university – a [Residential Advisor] – says ‘let’s go,’ the university would be responsible.’”

The complaint also lists the University of California Regents, the city and county of San Diego, the state of California, and the driver of the vehicle as defendants in the lawsuit.

When asked about the lawsuit by the Los Angeles Times, Sullivan said “We think it’s a case of shared responsibility of the school, Maria and the driver, and we’re not saying that anybody is without fault or fault-free. We think other people bear some responsibility as well.”

In addition, Sullivan explained that if any person representing the university, even if that person is simply a Residential Advisor, encouraged students to go to the protest, then the university would bear responsibility.

While Sullivan admits that Flores is partially responsible for her injuries, he claims that, under the doctrine of comparative responsibility, the jury will get to decide what percentage of the injury is the fault of the plaintiff and what percentage of the injury is the fault of the defendant. Damages will be levied based on percentage.

The lawsuit seeks attorneys’ fees, court costs, and unspecified damages, the Times reports.

RBP
01-04-2018, 01:30 PM
https://i.imgur.com/JFOwm0L.jpg?1

deebakes
01-04-2018, 11:52 PM
these kids must not have parents, i was told not to walk into the street without looking both ways to make sure it was safe :hand:

Teh One Who Knocks
01-05-2018, 11:20 AM
these kids must not have parents, i was told not to walk into the street without looking both ways to make sure it was safe :hand:

They had to protest President Trump by blocking traffic on the highway, that's more important than basic safety :hand:

RBP
01-05-2018, 02:09 PM
They had to protest President Trump by blocking traffic on the highway, that's more important than basic safety :hand:

If Trump wasn't Hitler, none of this would have happened.

Teh One Who Knocks
01-05-2018, 02:10 PM
If Trump wasn't Hitler, none of this would have happened.

:agreed:

deebakes
01-06-2018, 03:12 AM
:gimme5:

Teh One Who Knocks
07-22-2019, 11:48 AM
Drew Van Voorhis, San Diego State University - The College Fix


A judge has tossed out a personal injury lawsuit filed by a young woman who sued UC San Diego and others after she was hit by a vehicle as she protested the election of Donald Trump in the middle of a busy San Diego freeway.

The San Diego Superior Court has issued a notice of dismissal against Maria Ana Carrola Flores’ case, according to court documents obtained by The College Fix.

Flores, reportedly a UCSD student at the time of the November 2016 incident, partly blamed campus officials in her lawsuit, alleging Resident Advisors had effectively organized the protest by encouraging it, therefore campus officials shared responsibility for her injuries.

Her case was officially dismissed without prejudice on May 26, court documents show.

Reached for comment, her attorney Jerold Sullivan told The College Fix that the outcome was “a tragedy” and that the case will not be refiled.

“The person that ran her over did not have insurance and is judgement proof with no assets. Ms. Flores is left with no recourse for catastrophic physical injuries and a lifetime of medical expenses,” he said.

UCSD declined to comment to The College Fix.

During the early morning hours of Nov. 9, 2016, Flores and her peers had been demonstrating against the victory of Donald Trump’s presidential election when the protest eventually spread onto the I-5, a very large and busy eight-laned freeway that cuts through San Diego.

An emergency vehicle driving in an “S” formation was attempting to shut down traffic. Nevertheless, Flores was accidentally hit by a vehicle, resulting in a crushed pelvis, fractured leg, and other injuries, according to news reports.

The lawsuit, filed in 2017, named as defendants the UC system Board of Regents, the city and county of San Diego, the driver of the vehicle, and UC San Diego.

But late last year, Sullivan had filed an amended complaint that did not name the city and county of San Diego as defendants after a judge ruled the two entities bore no responsibility in the case, the UCSD Guardian reported.

Sullivan has noted that Flores never saw herself as completely fault-free in the accident, yet others listed in the lawsuit should be required to bear some of the responsibility.

“We think it’s a case of shared responsibility of the school, Maria and the driver, and we’re not saying that anybody is without fault or fault-free,” Sullivan told the LA Times in 2017. “We think other people bear some responsibility as well.”

fricnjay
07-22-2019, 04:25 PM
This is the problem with today's youth, NO PERSONAL ACCOUNTABILITY or RESPONSIBILITY. It was HER CHOICE to protest and HER CHOICE to walk onto a well know busy 8 lane highway = HER fault