Helmet may have saved cyclist’s life
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Deepa Bharath
Scott Delameter rides his bike down Coast Highway almost every
weekend.
Usually, the 38-year-old Newport Beach dad would be gone for two
hours. On Sunday afternoon, his routine bike ride was violently
interrupted when a gold compact car swerved into the bike lane and
struck Delameter.
The driver of the car did not bother to stop, Newport Beach Sgt.
Steve Shulman said, and Delameter was thrown off his bicycle. Both he
and the driver were traveling eastbound on Coast Highway. The
reported accident happened at Crystal Cove State Park at the
intersection of Coast Highway and Reef Point.
Delameter suffered a fractured back and a concussion and is
recovering at Mission Hospital in Mission Viejo, his wife Tami said
Tuesday.
“It’s extremely fortunate that he got away with this,” she said.
“Yeah, he’s pretty banged up and bruised. But it could’ve been worse.
He could’ve been paralyzed.”
Her husband was wearing a helmet, which saved his life, she said.
However, the incident hurt her husband both physically and
emotionally, she added.
“Sometimes, I’m happy when he remembers everything because we want
to help police get the driver,” she said. “But sometimes, I wish he’d
never remember anything because it’s all so traumatic.”
Police are investigating the case and talking to witnesses,
Shulman said.
“We did have a few witnesses who actually saw the incident,” he
said. “We’re hoping the driver has a change of heart and comes
forward.”
The incident is being treated as a hit-and-run felony case,
Shulman said.
Delameter works for a Laguna Niguel company that develops and
designs golf equipment. He always dreamed of starting his own
business, his wife said. The couple, married for 13 years, has a
10-year-old daughter.
“I’ve never seen my daughter so angry,” Tami Delameter said.
“After visiting Scott in the hospital she was really broken and
asking who would do such a thing to her daddy.”
Tami Delameter said she is having trouble dealing with that
herself.
“I’m just beside myself just thinking that someone would hit him
and then leave him on the street like that,” she said.
Anyone with information is asked to call the Newport Beach Police
Department’s crime hotline at (800) 550-6273.
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at deepa.bharath@ latimes.com.
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