In April a BMW racing
through a fruit market in Foshan in China’s Guangdong province knocked
down a 2-year-old girl and rolled over her head. As the girl’s
grandmother shouted, “Stop! You’ve hit a child!” the BMW’s driver
paused, then switched into reverse and backed up over the girl. The
woman at the wheel drove forward once more, crushing the girl for a
third time. When she finally got out from the BMW, the unlicensed driver
immediately offered the horrified family a deal: “Don’t say that I was
driving the car,” she said. “Say it was my husband. We can give you
money.”
It seems like a crazy urban legend: In China, drivers who
have injured pedestrians will sometimes then try to kill them. And yet
not only is it true, it’s fairly common; security cameras
have regularly captured drivers driving back and forth on top of
victims to make sure that they are dead. The Chinese language even has an adage for the phenomenon: “It is better to hit to kill than to hit and injure.”
This 2008 television report features security camera footage
of a dusty white Passat reversing at high speed and smashing into a
64-year-old grandmother. The Passat’s back wheels bounce up over her
head and body. The driver, Zhao Xiao Cheng, stops the car for a moment
then hits the gas, causing his front wheels to roll over the woman. Then
Zhao shifts into drive, wheels grinding the woman into the pavement.
Zhao is not done. Twice more he shifts back and forth between drive and
reverse, each time thudding over the grandmother’s body. He then speeds
away from her corpse.
Incredibly, Zhao was found not guilty of intentional
homicide. Accepting Zhao’s claim that he thought he was driving over a
trash bag, the court of Taizhou in Zhejiang province sentenced him to
just three years in prison for “negligence.” Zhao’s case was unusual
only in that it was caught on video. As the television anchor noted,
“You can see online an endless stream of stories talking about cases
similar to this one.”
“Double-hit cases” have been around for decades. I first
heard of the “hit-to-kill” phenomenon in Taiwan in the mid-1990s when I
was working there as an English teacher. A fellow teacher would drive us
to classes. After one near-miss of a motorcyclist, he said, “If I hit
someone, I’ll hit him again and make sure he’s dead.” Enjoying my shock,
he explained that in Taiwan, if you cripple a man, you pay for the
injured person’s care for a lifetime. But if you kill the person, you
“only have to pay once, like a burial fee.” He insisted he was
serious—and that this was common.
A Slate Plus Special Feature:
How Can This Possibly Happen?
Most people agree that the hit-to-kill phenomenon stems at
least in part from perverse laws on victim compensation. In China the
compensation for killing a victim in a traffic accident is relatively
small—amounts typically range from $30,000 to $50,000—and once payment
is made, the matter is over. By contrast, paying for lifetime care for a
disabled survivor can run into the millions. The Chinese press recently
described how one disabled man received about $400,000 for the first 23
years of his care. Drivers who decide to hit-and-kill do so because
killing is far more economical. Indeed, Zhao Xiao Cheng—the man caught
on a security camera video driving over a grandmother five times—ended
up paying only about $70,000 in compensation.
In 2010 in Xinyi, video
captured a wealthy young man reversing his BMW X6 out of a parking
spot. He hits a 3-year-old boy, knocking the child to the ground and
rolling over his skull. The driver then shifts his BMW into drive and
crushes the child again. Remarkably, the driver then gets out of the
BMW, puts the vehicle in reverse, and guides it with his hand as he
walks the vehicle backward over the boy’s crumpled body. The man’s foot
is so close to the toddler’s head that, if alive, the boy could have
reached out and touched him. The driver then puts the BMW in drive
again, running over the boy one last time as he drives away.
Here too, the driver was charged only with accidentally
causing a person’s death. (He claimed to have confused the boy with a
cardboard box or trash bag.) Police rejected charges of murder and even
of fleeing the scene of the crime, ignoring the fact that the driver ran
over the boy’s head as he sped away.
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