The death of a 55-year-old bicyclist in a Sacramento hit and run crash shows the worst-case version of a problem that keeps repeating on California streets: a vulnerable road user struck by a driver who leaves the scene, and a family left to figure out what to do next.
Local reporting described the death of a 55-year-old bicyclist in Sacramento after being struck by a driver who left the scene. Hit and run crashes involving bicyclists are among the most lethal collisions on California streets because there is no protective vehicle around the rider and often delayed emergency response.
Investigators usually treat hit and run fatalities as both criminal and civil matters. The criminal case targets the driver. The civil case is about compensating the family, which can move forward even when the driver has not yet been identified.
California law requires drivers to stop, exchange information, and render aid after a collision. Leaving the scene of a crash that caused injury or death is a serious criminal offense, separate from any underlying traffic violation.
On the civil side, the driver who flees is still liable for the harm caused. The challenge is identification. When the driver is later identified, their insurance can be pursued. When the driver is never identified, uninsured motorist coverage often becomes the path to compensation.
California uninsured motorist coverage generally applies when the at-fault driver is unknown, uninsured, or underinsured. Hit and run crashes are the classic uninsured scenario: there is no identified driver and no carrier to pursue, so the injured person’s or family’s own coverage often steps in.
A bicyclist is usually covered under their household auto policy’s uninsured motorist provisions even though they were on a bike. A careful coverage review identifies every policy and stack that could apply.
Identification is the central problem in a hit and run. Surveillance and doorbell cameras, witness accounts, vehicle debris left at the scene, paint transfer on the bicycle, and tire patterns all become critical evidence.
Acting fast protects the case. Private camera footage often gets overwritten in days. Crowdsourced video tips, neighborhood social posts, and law enforcement bulletins all play a role. Coordinated effort between the family, counsel, and investigators is what produces results.
Care for the family first. When ready, gather the police report, identify witnesses, save photographs, and avoid recorded statements to any insurer before getting legal advice. Even when the driver has not been identified, the case can begin.
California wrongful death deadlines run during the criminal investigation. A free consultation early is not about pushing litigation. It is about preserving evidence and understanding all available coverage.
Scranton Law Firm helps families across Northern California pursue hit and run wrongful death claims and identify every applicable source of coverage.