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WCU student victim of off-campus hit and run

Shane Madden

Issue date: 9/17/07 Section: News

The sidewalk of S. High Street is still painted where the West Chester Police Department marked the point at which Kristen Gilia, a fourth year communication studies major, was struck by a speeding car around 1:30 a.m. on Sept. 2. Roughly 10 feet away from the first marker is a second painted circle indicating where Gilia's body landed after being carried on the hood of the car.

Gilia was walking home with a group of friends from Barnaby's Sports Bar after celebrating a friend's twenty-first birthday when she began crossing High Street at the intersection of Sharpless Street, just several yards away from campus and only a block and a half from reaching her apartment. According to the official police report and Gilia's own account from the night of the accident, she was in the crosswalk and the street was clear of traffic in both directions.

"I saw a car a few blocks away near Papa John's and the old Rat. As I was about halfway across the street I remember thinking that the car looked like it was going kind of fast," Gilia said.

After the impact, Gilia said that she had no recollection of the accident and awoke several minutes later as her friend Katie Murray asked her to state her name.

The police markings show that Gilia was approximately just one foot from reaching the opposite side of the street before she was struck.

The police found no skid marks on the road that would indicate that the car attempted to stop or slow down. According to the police report, witnesses on the porches of nearby houses said that the car "showed no signs of braking, and was going at least 50 mph."

"When it hit her, the impact was so hard it made a cracking noise like a gunshot, and a lot of people came out of their houses because it was so loud."

"I didn't think I was hurt" Gilia said, regarding when she regained consciousness. "After the EMS came and put me on the stretcher, my legs were limp and just fell off of the right side. That's when they realized I was paralyzed on my right side."

Temporarily wheelchair-bound, Gilia is no longer paralyzed but suffered extensive injuries including a broken shoulder, broken thumb and three hairline pelvic fractures. Gilia also underwent a three hour surgery on her right arm. Doctors inserted a metal plate with 15 screws.

It will be six to eight weeks before doctors will allow her to drive again or walk without the aid of a walker.

"I tried to walk across the street to the Bull Center and it felt like I had walked eight miles," Gilia recalled.
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maria miley

posted 9/18/07 @ 2:48 PM EST

perhaps a reward by a few orgiznations on campus would stir the memory of any witness who has not come foward with information on this driver and vehicle. (Continued…)

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