Emma Way was apparently annoyed by the happy bike riders in the road taking part in the 100-mile Boudicca Sportive event. But it wasn’t deliberate when she knocked one of them off his bike and into a hedge when her car’s wing mirror struck his handlebar.

Intuiting that the bicyclist, Toby Hockley, wasn’t hurt, she drove off. Later she tweeted:

Definitely knocked a cyclist off his bike earlier – I have right of way he doesn’t even pay road tax! #bloodycyclists

Nice victim blaming. That’ll teach him. Wonder if there’s anything you could learn, Ms Way?

The tweet was instantly flashed around the UK bike websites. The local Norfolk police, tweeted:

emmaway20 we have had tweets ref an RTC with a bike. We suggest you report it at a police station ASAP if not done already & then dm us

Since then Way has spoken with the police, been suspended from the company where she was a trainee accountant – a company well known as a cycling sponsor – and made matters worse with a ITV interview.

Emma Way, ITV screen capture

It’s sad for me

“I posted a stupid tweet,” she said in the interview. (Yes, that was indeed stupid in so many ways. From the point of view of legal self-protection, from the point of view of staying employed, and from the point of view of being a DECENT HUMAN BEING.)

The interviewer asked why she posted it. “Because it was a spur-of-the-moment stupid tweet,” she said. “The social network gets blown all out of proportion. It was a spur-of-the-moment thing, and you know, I’m sorry. I didn’t realise it would ever escalate to this.” (Yes, if it weren’t for the CRAZY SOCIAL MEDIA she could rant on social media about knocking someone over without people MAKING A BIG THING about it.)

“I’m getting severely bad-named.” Nasty calls and messages. “Obviously my career is now – I have been suspended, and it’s now possibly – over.” Her attorney watched dolefully as she continued her ill-advised stream of self-pity.

He recapped the talking points. “As already indicated she apologises for the tweet and of course, as any one would be, she’s sorry if there’s been any discomfort caused to the cyclist. She’s not anti-cyclist. She’s a cyclist herself.”

Photo: Lt. Puttnam. Imperial War Museum. Public domain.

If knocked off bike, proceed on foot.

The interviewer, fashioning a noose just Emma Way’s size and passing it to her, metaphorically speaking, asked what she would say if Toby Hockley were in the room. “If I did cause any damage to him, I would obviously apologise. But I didn’t feel him even touch my car – apart from his handlebar donked the wing mirror – and I would just want to obviously make him know that if I knew that he was hurt, I would never have driven off.” (That’s not how hitting someone works. You don’t get to decide without stopping if the other party’s okay.)

“I just want to say sorry for any discomfort caused to anybody and if I could take back doing that tweet I would.” (We believe you. What about taking back KNOCKING THE GUY OFF HIS BIKE?) “You know my whole career is at risk now, and — any damage caused to the cyclist, I don’t want any cyclist to think that I have hatred against them, because I’m a cyclist myself.” (Which is like saying “I have a Black friend.”)

One reason this story won’t die is because Way’s apologies are terrible, filled with minimizing (discomfort! donked!), and outweighed by her self-pity. She’s sorry because she didn’t realize it would escalate, she might not get her job back, and her career might be ruined. Not because she failed to stop after committing what her attorney terms a “careless driving offense.”

What was her attorney thinking? Why didn’t he advise her to say she’s sorry she knocked Hockley off his bike, sorry she didn’t stop, sorry she didn’t report it, sorry she tweeted blame to the victim?

Photo: Evelyn Simak. geograph.org.uk Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.

Bloody cyclists not allowed on path to Beeston Regis, Norfolk.

ITV also interviewed Hockley, who said he was “very surprised” Way didn’t stop. He said he’d been relieved to be in one piece, happy to be able to finish the ride – and not inclined to pursue it because he worried that his girlfriend would make him stop riding.

When the tweet went viral Hockley, a freelance chef, came forward as the cyclist in question. He says the attitude Way displayed was silly, disrespectful, and dangerous in a driver.

“I’m sorry that she’s in trouble with her employers….I think it’s a shame for anyone to lose their job,” he said. “But if she hit me any harder, I’d have been out of work.”

Pin It on Pinterest

Share