Reporter’s Notebook -- Deepa Bharath
It was a loud bang followed by the sound of crumbling glass.
And then it happened.
Gusts of wind bellowed into my car and little pieces of glass flew in
the air drifting dangerously in my direction.
Driving to work on the Costa Mesa Freeway, I tried to slow down and
figure out what had just happened. I saw the right side rear window of my
Honda Civic quickly disintegrating -- like somebody had hit it with a
sledgehammer.
My husband had lovingly polished that glass with Windex over the
weekend. Now there was a hole the size of a football there.
Three years ago, when I first came to Southern California, I was
mortified even when I caught a glimpse of busy freeways from the airplane
preparing to land at Los Angeles International Airport.
Surely, I was not expected to drive at 65 mph with these big rigs
whizzing past me, was I? I couldn’t spend hours dodging careless
commuters who drive with a cell phone in one hand and a breakfast burrito
in the other, could I?
As it happened, I was expected to drive on the freeways and, as it
turned out, I wasn’t too bad at anticipating mistakes other drivers might
make.
My job almost made it mandatory to spend close to three hours on the
freeway every day. And I got used to it.
But it got scarier over the days and months as I became aware of the
perils that await unsuspecting drivers.
“This crazy guy on the freeway shot at me when I was going to a school
board meeting,” I heard a frazzled colleague telling others in the
newsroom about six months ago.
You hear about these mean people all the time. Kids throwing rocks at
passing vehicles from bridges. Vandals and miscreants shooting BB guns
randomly.
Well, even if you don’t do what I do for a living, I bet your
imagination would run amok if your car window transformed into powdered
glass before your very eyes.
So, I pulled over and checked it out. I was calmer than I would have
expected to be. I guess I owe my composure to hearing, researching and
writing about accidents and crimes every day.
Puzzled and, to a certain extent, desensitized, I knocked off the rest
of the glass and looked inside the car in the middle of the broken glass.
I realized I was looking for a bullet or a pellet.
I couldn’t see a rock. But, surely, something hit the glass. I did
hear a bang. So I drove to work and called one of my sources, a police
officer who has probably seen hundreds of cars shot and several glasses
shatter.
“Hmm, that’s strange,” he said. “If it were a rock or a BB gun, the
glass could’ve cracked. But for it to totally shatter like that, it
probably had to have been something bigger.”
Something bigger. A handgun? A rifle? A stun gun? An AK-47 perhaps?
There was only one thing left to do. I called the California Highway
Patrol.
The watch commander quietly listened for a minute as I told him my
story.
“Yeah, that’s the way it’s supposed to break,” he said as a matter of
fact.
Excuse me?
“It’s designed to break that way so the shards don’t come out and hurt
you,” he explained patiently. “We get a lot of these calls, you know,
people thinking they’ve been shot on the freeway.”
“So, I don’t have to file a complaint?” I asked him.
“Against who? The rock that hit your car?” the officer said with a
laugh. “Sure, ma’am. If we find that rock, we’ll let you know.”
-- Deepa Bharath covers cops and courts. She may be reached at (949)
574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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