A court in Germany has approved the extradition to Italy of the lorry driver involved in the crash near Vicenza last November in which retired professional cyclist Davide Rebellin lost his life.
Italian cycling website Tuttobiciweb reports that a court in Hamm, North Rhine-Westphalia, has agreed to a request from prosecutors in Vicenza for the driver, Wolfgang Rieke, to be extradited to Italy.
After the fatal crash in Montebello Vicentino on 30 November last year, the 62-year-old driver got out of his cab briefly to assess the cyclist’s condition.
He then fled the scene and, after stopping in Verona, drove to Germany, where his brother’s haulage firm is based, four days after the fatal crash.
Rebellin, who had recently retired from professional cycling at the age of 51 following a career spanning three decades, was pronounced dead at the scene due to the trauma of the crash and severe internal injuries.
Italian authorities have been hampered in their efforts to bring Rieke to trial because there is no equivalent in Germany to the Italian law of “omocidio stradale,” or “traffic homicide.”
Police in Germany have continued to work alongside their Italian counterparts in the investigation, however, and an examination of the lorry Rieke was driving discovered damage consistent with the collision, as well as evidence that it had been cleaned with a concentrated, highly acidic detergent.
Subsequently, Rieke was arrested in Germany last month under a European arrest warrant relating to traffic homicide and failure to render assistance, and spent four days in custody.
> Lorry driver who killed Davide Rebellin arrested in Germany – almost seven months after retired classics star’s death
Following the approval yesterday by the court in Hamm for his extradition, it now falls upon the Italian and German foreign and justice ministries to agree the details of his transfer to Italy, where investigating magistrates have requested that he be placed in prison while awaiting trial.
Rieke is no stranger to the Italian justice system, and has two prior convictions to his name for driving-related offences committed in the country.
In 2001, he was convicted of fleeing the scene of a crash in Foggia, Puglia, without stopping to render assistance to those involved, while in 2014, he was handed a driving ban after being found drunk at the wheel of his vehicle in Chieti, Abruzzo.
The deterrent effect is almost certainly due to the massively increased likelihood of the offence being detected. As with other crimes, if the...
As a member of the Co-op community (I live in a Housing Co-op) and a bike owner /rider, this is very sad news. We need more Co-ops not less.
My EV exceeds the size. It's the smallest vehicle available which can transport my wife's trike (excursions or rescue).
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Fair enough, personal experience may trump (not that one) theory. However, the bonking I have experienced has been due to lack of carbs. Your point...