
Six months after Cambridge cyclist death, authorities seek charges against driver
Police said at the time the driver lost control of his vehicle and struck Corcoran. The driver, who has yet to be identified, was described at the time as a man in his 20s. Corcoran was later pronounced dead at Massachusetts General Hospital, authorities said.
The update from the district attorney, which did not include the specific charges prosecutors are seeking, followed a probe led by the Massachusetts State Police Collision Analysis and Reconstruction Section. A spokesperson for the state police said investigators completed that effort earlier this month.
Advertisement
It also comes after six long months of waiting for Barbara Bower, Corcoran's widow, who said she learned of the progress in the case in a meeting on Monday with the District Attorney's office.
Reminders of her late husband come often, she said.
In the time that has passed since the crash, she and her two children have been filling a group chat, and a notebook, with catchphrases Corcoran used to say.
They have soothed the family dog, who spent many work-from-home days curled up on his lap, and still seems confused that he's gone.
On Christmas Eve, they couldn't bring themselves to revive a family tradition of playing the video game Rock Band together. Without Corcoran there to sing 'Bohemian Rhapsody,' it wouldn't have been the same.
'I probably think of him more now than when he was alive,' said Bower. 'It's just always there, the empty bed that you wake up to, the empty seat at the table. Coming home from work, and the house is quiet and dark.'
Advertisement
The fatal crash was one of three involving cyclists in Cambridge last year, galvanizing the local biking community behind efforts to improve roadways — and, for many, to hold the drivers involved accountable.
The other cases involved two cyclists who authorities said were fatally struck by box trucks in June.
The first was Kim Staley, a 55-year-old Florida resident, who had been riding a bike on Mt. Auburn Street near Harvard Square. Two weeks later, Minh-Thi Nguyen, a 24-year-old MIT graduate student, died after a crash while riding a bike on Hampshire Street in Kendall Square.
Those cases remain open, police said.
Nguyen's family last month
Activists last fall held rallies calling for roadway improvements after the death of cyclist John Corcoran after a crash near the Boston University DeWolfe Boathouse in September.
Kayla Bartkowski For The Boston
Delayed resolution in collisions that lead to deaths or serious injuries is a common predicament, experts said, given the pace of the reconstruction processes in cases like these.
The wait can be excruciating.
'It puts everything at a standstill,' said Brian Simoneau, a Marlborough-based attorney. 'It's a huge problem.'
A State Police spokesperson said crash investigations, which are exhaustive, are typically completed in 120 days — about four months — although they can take longer for more complex cases.
Simoneau, who represents people who have had their license suspended in Massachusetts while such investigations are pending, said it can take a year or more for the reports to be released.
Often investigators have to wait for other results, including toxicology or autopsy reports, which can themselves be bogged down by backlogs, Simoneau said. He believes the entire system should move more quickly.
Advertisement
After the three Cambridge deaths, cyclists pushed for roadway improvements.
The Department of Conservation and Recreation in October announced plans to begin work on
Bower, for her part, said she is thankful for the support she has received from Boston-area cyclists, and has considered taking them up on an offer to get involved in advocacy for bicycling causes.
'Just a really wonderful community of people,' she said, of the bike advocates. 'I'm sorry that we weren't a part of it when John was alive because we've met some really, really great people.'
In the meantime, Bower said her family has been doing what it can to keep themselves occupied.
Her children, both Harvard students, stayed in school and are on track to graduate on time. Their father, also a Harvard man and ever the forward thinker, had scheduled a graduation party at the Harvard Club for his oldest just a week before he died.
Bower is also training to run the Boston Marathon in April, and the routine has been a salve on hard days. She still visits the 'ghost bike,' which activists attached to a fence outside the BU Boathouse during a ceremony after his death, regularly.
And she continues to think of her late husband, she said, 'almost every second of every day.'
Barbara Bower and her daughter on Sunday visited the "ghost bike" memorial for her late husband, John Corcoran, near the Boston University DeWolfe Boathouse.
Matthew J. Lee/Globe Staff
Spencer Buell can be reached at
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Iran accused of abducting journalist's family in retaliation for war coverage
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran detained the family members of an Iran International journalist Saturday in retaliation for the channel's coverage of the country's war with Israel, threatening to hold them until the journalist resigned from her position. The London-based Farsi news channel said in a statement that it strongly condemns the abduction of its journalist's family, calling it 'an appalling act of hostage-taking aimed at coercing our colleague into resigning from their post.' 'This deeply reprehensible tactic marks a dangerous escalation in the regime's ruthless campaign to silence dissent and suppress independent journalism,' the news channel said. The detainment marks the latest example of Iran's longstanding effort to crack down not only on Iranian journalists inside the country but also those abroad who still have family and friends living in Iran. The Islamic Republic is one of the world's top jailer of journalists, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, and in the best of times, reporters face strict restrictions. The broadcaster said that Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guards took the presenter's mother, father and younger brother to an unidentified location. The journalist, whose name the outlet did not disclose, then received a phone call from her father early Saturday, urging her to resign from her role, according to Iran International. The voices of security agents could be heard in the background telling her father what to say. 'I've told you a thousand times to resign. What other consequences do you expect?' Iran International said her father told her. 'You have to resign.' Farsi-language broadcasters like Iran International and BBC Persia have long been targets for the Islamic Republic, given the fact that they broadcast in the native language and many Iranians, both domestically and abroad, rely on them for news, especially of the most recent Iran-Israel war amid an official internet blackout. Iran International in particular has become a target of Tehran in recent years over its programming that is critical of the theocratic government in Tehran. The Iranian government has called the news outlet a terrorist organization. One of its journalists was stabbed in 2024 in an attack suspected to have been carried out by Iran, while men were arrested in a suspected plot to target others at the channel.


Hamilton Spectator
11 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
What is the Lawrence Bishnoi gang? And why do Canadian politicians want them labelled terrorists?
An India-based criminal organization is drawing increasing political scrutiny in Canada, with some saying it needs to be declared a terrorist organization. This week, Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown called on Ottawa to declare the Lawrence Bishnoi gang a terrorist organization, joining a chorus of other voices. 'We must take transnational crime seriously and that means giving law enforcement the investigative tools to combat these sophisticated criminal networks,' Brown said on X. Brown was joined by deputy mayor Harkirat Singh and regional councillors Gurpartap Singh Toor and Navjit Kaur Brar in the request to have the Lawrence Bishnoi gang declared a criminal organization by Ottawa. 'The Bishnoi gang, a transnational criminal network, led from India, has been linked to a growing wave of violence, extortion and intimidation targeting South Asian communities in Brampton and across the Region of Peel,' Brown said in a prepared statement. The statement did not give examples of specific violent incidents. The Lawrence Bishnoi group was also named in the murder of Brampton-based rapper Sidhu Moose Wala, when Wala was in India in 2022. Bishnoi, who is in his early 30s, is the son of a police officer and was educated in a convent school. Now in custody in India on more than two dozen charges, including murder and extortion, he awaits trial. He has been accused of using intimidation tactics to extort business owners in Punjabi diaspora communities in North America, Europe and the Gulf states. The gang is reportedly run by Bishnoi through encrypted cell messages, even though he is behind bars in India. Brown's comments follow similar ones earlier this week, when B.C. Premier David Eby urged the federal government to label the gang a terrorist organization because of extortion and other crimes against the South Asian community on the West Coast. Eby said Tuesday that he was going to write to Prime Minister Mark Carney, asking that the Lawrence Bishnoi group be labelled a terrorist group 'to enable police to be able to use the necessary tools to investigate.' Last fall, the RCMP stated the gang was targeting members of the pro-Khalistan movement who were on Canadian soil, allegedly acting for the Indian government. On the West Coast, the Lawrence Bishnoi group was accused this week of firing bullets into the home of a Punjabi music producer. Last year, shots were reportedly fired at the home of Punjabi music star A.P. Dhillon on Vancouver Island and in 2023, shots were fired outside the West Vancouver home of Bollywood singer and actor Gippy Grewal. Indian media said the Lawrence Bishnoi group claimed responsibility for both attacks. Moves to label the Lawrence Bishnoi gang a terrorist group throw complications into Carney's attempts to rebuild the Canada-India relationship. Eby's announcement on Tuesday was praised by the World Sikh Organization of Canada. 'Canadian law enforcement and intelligence agencies have linked the Bishnoi gang to assassinations, extortions, and intimidation carried out at the direction of Indian government agents including the 2023 murder of Canadian Sikh leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar and other violent crimes,' the organization said. With files from The Canadian Press


New York Post
19 hours ago
- New York Post
Grieving parents awarded $2.25M after Georgia doctor plastered videos of their decapitated baby on social media
A Georgia couple whose baby was decapacitated during childbirth was awarded a $2.25 million verdict after their pathologist posted graphic autopsy videos on social media without their consent. Dr. Jackson Gates and his Atlanta-based business will have to fork over the large sum to Jessica Ross and Traveon Taylor Sr. after a Fulton County jury found him liable of emotional distress, invasion of privacy, and fraud on Wednesday. 'This young couple trusted him with the remains of their precious baby,' attorney's for the grieving parents said, noting that the doctor 'poured salt into the couple's already deep wounds.' 3 Jessica Ross and Treveon Taylor Sr., parents of a baby who was decapitated during childbirth. AP 'Gates, in turn, repaid this trust by posting horrific images of their child for the world to see.' The heartbroken couple hired the twisted doctor to perform an autopsy on their deceased newborn two days after their obstetrician allegedly applied excessive force to the baby's neck when its shoulders became stuck in Ross's pelvic area, causing it to detach during the traumatic July 2023 delivery. 3 The traumatic delivery occurred at Southern Regional Medical Center in July 2023. ERIK S LESSER/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock The baby's head was delivered vaginally, but the rest of the body was removed via C-section. The death was later ruled a homicide. Gates posted numerous videos and photos to his Instagram later that month, showing the grisly postmortem examination of their infants 'decapitated, severed head,' the couple said in their lawsuit. The deranged pathologist initially removed the footage after receiving a letter from the couple's attorney — but later reposted them, according to the lawsuit. 3 The couple was awarded $2.25 million in a lawsuit against their pathologist. AP Gates' attorney, Ira Livant, said his client typically documents his autopsy's on social media to educate fellow pathologists and highlight the importance of independent examinations in cases where families suspect medical misconduct. 'Dr. Gates testified that he is deeply sorry for any harm that he unintentionally caused the plaintiffs,' Livant said Saturday. 'Had he known for one second that they would see that and that they would know it was their child, he would never have done it.' The couple will receive $2 million in compensatory damages and an additional $250,000 in punitive damages from Gates and his company, Medical Diagnostics Choices, per the judgement. The bereaved parents have separate lawsuits pending against the delivering doctor and the Riverdale hospital where the horrific incident took place. With Post wires.