Family and friends of Elyse Stern sat in a Minneapolis courtroom Monday, telling a judge how the March night when she was struck and killed by a car while riding her bicycle darkened their days forever. Shortly after the driver was sentenced in that case, another man accused of fatally striking a bicyclist in the city last week was turning himself in to police.
Tips from the community produced the break investigators needed to identify the 24-year-old man who police say is expected to be charged with criminal vehicular homicide in the death of Jessica Hanson.
Police said a hit-and-run driver struck Hanson about 10:30 p.m. Wednesday after going through a stop sign at W. 28th Street and Pleasant Avenue S., above the speed limit with the car lights turned off.
Hanson, 24, a server at an Uptown bar called Republic, died two days later.
Chad Kummrow, Hanson's cousin, said she donated vital organs that will save five lives, including a man who has waited for a pancreas for a year. Others will receive her lungs, liver, kidneys and heart, "the only great thing to come out of this," he said.
"It's a good thing the suspect turned himself in, because you start to wonder if the police will ever find him," Kummrow said. "Now we don't have to waste time on these thoughts."
'Safety in numbers'
Bicycle crashes declined by 4.5 percent statewide last year, although the number of fatalities rose, from five to seven.
In Minneapolis, the city's bicycle and pedestrian coordinator said Monday that even with more bicyclists on the road, this year's crash rate compares to previous years.