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  • 1
    Apr
    2013
    12:13pm, EDT

    Biker dressed as Easter Bunny pulled over by California officers

    California Highway Patrol

    A motorcycle rider in an Easter Bunny costume was pulled over by a California Highway Patrol officer on Saturday.

    By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Move over, Mad Max. Step aside, Easy Rider. The Easter Bunny rules the road.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    A motorcyclist wearing a full Easter Bunny costume was pulled over by the California Highway Patrol early Saturday after officers on routine patrol spotted the costumed man traveling down Interstate 8 without a helmet, NBCLosAngeles.com reported.

    CHP Officer Adam Griffiths reportedly radioed: “I’m stopping the Easter Bunny.”

    The motorist – who was cruising in a shiny red bike with an old-fashioned sidecar – told Griffiths that he was on his way to an Easter charity event at which he was required to wear a bunny costume, including white gloves and floppy feet.

    Griffiths' partner snapped a photo of the repentant rabbit, which has since circulated widely on social media networks.

    Grifiths told the man that the bunny head obstructed his view and put other motorists in danger, according to local reports. But Griffiths ultimately let him off with a verbal warning instead of a citation.

    “If you ride a motorcycle, you have to be aware of your total surroundings,” CHP spokesman Brian Pennings told the Los Angeles Times.

    213 comments

    A very Hare raising incident

    Show more
    Explore related topics: motorcycle, biker, california-highway-patrol, easter-bunny, easter, chp, easter-bunny-pulled-over
  • 16
    Jan
    2013
    8:42pm, EST

    Frustrated by police, California woman launches investigation into brother's death

    View more videos at: http://nbcsandiego.com.

    By Tony Shin, NBC San Diego

    Barbara Yarborough wouldn't stop until she found the person who ran over and killed her 41-year-old brother.

    When the case reached a dead end, the California woman took over and hired her own investigators to give her family closure.

    Every day Yarborough goes into her garage, she sees a grim reminder of the worst moment in her life. It’s the broken and banged up motorcycle that her older brother Frank Yarborough was riding when he was killed by a hit-and-run driver.


    “This was the last thing my brother touched before his life was taken from him,” Yarborough told NBC San Diego in an exclusive interview.

    The motorcycle has been a symbol of her heart and determination to find the man who killed Frank.

    Read more at NBC San Diego

    The Riverside County man was a father of two boys when he died on Jan. 7, 2011. He was driving home when a tractor trailer hung a U-turn and ran him over.

    “I still mourn every day,” Yarborough said.

    “I cry going to sleep, I cry waking up," she said. "It’s hard to heal when the wounds stay fresh.”

    Yarborough says two witnesses pointed out two different tractor trailers as possible suspect vehicles. But she says investigators focused their attention only on one because that witness seemed more credible.

    Months went by and the investigation stalled. Yarborough decided to conduct her own investigation.

    “I just knew I had to get the motorcycle,” she said.

    Yarborough bought her brother’s motorcycle from a salvage yard and hired two former San Diego Police officers to investigate Frank’s hit and run.

    Larry Ingraham and Donovan Jacobs interviewed the other witness who claimed to have seen a different tractor-trailer hit Frank.

    “Our effort in the case was to refocus on what that one witness was saying who identified the driver of a Ralph's truck for being responsible for the accident,” Jacobs said.

    On the night of the crash, California Highway Patrol investigators interviewed 39-year-old Dixon Russell Dixon.

    He was Ralph's Auto & Truck Service driver who was eating inside his tractor trailer near the crime scene.

    “Police questioned him, to see if he knew anything he said, 'No, I was in Del Taco getting lunch,' so they let him go,” Barbara said.

    But Yarborough says her private investigators found compelling evidence implicating Dixon.

    They can't reveal that evidence because it's now part of the criminal case.

    On Jan. 9, two years and two days after her brother's death, investigators arrested Dixon for felony hit and run at his San Bernardino County home.

    “How could he run over my brother and see his dead body on the road and not take responsibility for what he’s done,” Yarborough said.

    Yarborough's private investigator Donovan Jacobs is also representing family members in a civil lawsuit against Ralph’s.

    NBC San Diego called the company's public relations representative for comment, but the call has not been returned.

    Dixon posted a $50,000 bond. His next court appearance has been set for March.

    9 comments

    It's too bad that she had to step-up, in spite of her grief, & do the job of the police force in San Diego. They obviously neglected their duty to her brother; that is to track down the person responsible for his death. I only hope that my sister would do what she did. God bless you sister!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: motorcycle, crime, nbcsandiego
  • 3
    Jul
    2012
    5:46am, EDT

    Motorcyclist killed on way to memorial for another biker who died in crash

    By Pei-Sze Cheng, NBCNewYork.com

    A motorcyclist was struck and killed by a fire truck in Brooklyn, New York, while he was on his way to a memorial for another biker killed in a crash one year ago.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The motorcyclist, 46-year-old Reginald Brown of Brooklyn, was driving westbound on Monroe Avenue in Bedford-Stuyvesant when he collided with an FDNY fire truck at Marcy Avenue at about 4 p.m., officials said. He was a block away from his home.


    Witness Danae Grandison said Brown's body "flew off the motorcycle," and he landed in front of a beauty salon. He was wearing a helmet. 

    Read the full story at NBCNewYork.com

    The fire truck from Ladder Company 111 was responding to a fire at 315 Nostrand Ave., caused when a 17-year-old boy set off illegal fireworks, officials said. The truck had its lights and sirens on.

    Brown was taken to Woodhull Hospital where he died, officials said.

    Tiesha Safford said she was "confused" by how her cousin, who was a careful motorcyclist, could have been struck.

    "He rides his bike pretty slow so I don't know how he wasn't able to hear them," said Brown's cousin Tiesha Safford. "I don't understand." 

    Friends told NBC 4 New York Brown was going to a memorial for a friend who died in a motorcycle crash one year ago on Utica Avenue and Avenue D in Brooklyn. 

    "He said he was going to change his clothes, and we were going to link up to go to the memorial for a friend of ours," said friend Sidest Mahadi. 

    Brown was a stickler for rules, said Mahadi.

    The teen accused of using the illegal fireworks was later arrested, FDNY officials said.

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    136 comments

    "He said he was going to change his clothes, and we were going to link up to go to the memorial for a friend of ours," said friend Sidest Mahadi. Sad for all concerned. Firemen dream of saving people, not hurting them or killing them. People die everyday all around us and we never really notice unt …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york, accident, life, safety, motorcycle, road, biker, featured
  • 25
    May
    2012
    10:13am, EDT

    Harley-Davidson motorcycle swept away by Japan tsunami to be preserved in museum

    Peter Mark / The Canadian Press via AP

    A rust-encrusted Harley-Davidson motorcycle that was swept away by the Japan tsunami in March 2011 was found by Peter Mark in April, washed up on an island off the coast of British Columbia. It's now headed to a Harley museum.

    By James Eng, NBC News

    A Japanese man’s Harley-Davidson motorcycle that washed up on the shores of western Canada more than a year after it was swept away by the devastating tsunami will be preserved in a Harley museum in the U.S.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The 2004 FXSTB Softail Night Train motorcycle will be permanently housed in the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee, Wis., as a memorial to the victims of the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, which swamped several coastal towns in northeastern Japan and left more than 15,000 people dead.


    “It is truly amazing that my Harley-Davidson motorcycle was recovered in Canada after drifting for more than a year,” said the bike’s owner, Ikuo Yokoyama, in a press release issued Friday by Deeley Harley-Davidson, the Canadian distributor of Harleys. “I would like to take this opportunity to express my heartfelt appreciation to Peter Mark, the finder of my motorcycle. Due to circumstances caused by the disaster, I have been so far unable to visit him in Canada to convey my gratitude.”

    Mark found the motorcycle, still bearing its Japanese license plate, while driving his ATV on an isolated beach on Graham Island on the west coast of British Columbia on April 18. The bike, along with several other items, was inside a rusted cargo van container that apparently drifted more than 4,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean.

    “You just never know what you’re going to stumble upon when you go for a drive, and lo and behold you just come across something that’s out of this world,” Mark told CBC at the time.

    The motorcycle was eventually traced to the 29-year-old Yokoyama.

    The tsunami destroyed Yokoyama’s home in Miyagi prefecture and also claimed the lives of three family members, according to Japanese media reports. Yokoyama currently lives in temporary housing in Miyagi prefecture.

    He said the motorcycle was being kept in a storage container behind his house when the tsunami struck.

    Deeley Harley-Davidson Canada

    The Harley will soon be transported to the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee.

    Harley-Davidson offered to return the rust-encrusted bike to him and to restore it to running condition but Yokoyama respectfully declined, the company said.

    “Since the motorcycle was recovered, I have discussed with many people about what to do with it. I would be delighted if it could be preserved in its current condition and exhibited to the many visitors to the Harley Davidson Museum as a memorial to a tragedy that claimed thousands of lives,” Yokoyama was quoted as saying in Friday’s press release.

    Harley-Davidson has offered to fly him to visit the museum and meet Marks, the Canadian who retrieved the bike. Yokoyama said he would like to do so “when things have calmed down.”

    “My heart really goes out to Ikuo Yokoyama and all the survivors of the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami for everything that was taken from them. I cannot even begin to comprehend the loss of family, friends, and community,” Mark was quoted by Harley-Davidson as saying. “I think it is fitting that the Harley, which was swept across the Pacific Ocean by the tsunami, will end up in the Harley-Davidson Museum as a memorial to that tragic event. It has an interesting and powerful story to convey preserved in its current state.”

    The motorcycle has since been transferred to a Harley dealership in Vancouver. Plans for its transportation to the Harley museum are being developed.

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    324 comments

    The grace, dignity, and kindness of Ikuo Yokoyama warms me. To suffer such losses is unimaginable to most of us. Wishing him future happiness and goodwill in his life.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, japan, tsunami, harley-davidson, motorcycle

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