"It is possible that the person walking southbound parallel to the bus driving northbound may be in a blind spot that is longer than a moment in time," defense attorney, Marc Kapetan, told the court.
[Ads /]
Kapetan argued his client is only guilty of misdemeanor manslaughter because of an honest mistake while driving.
Kapetan claims the bus's frame and review mirrors prevented the driver from seeing Javier Silva as he crossed the street at Fruit and Shields.
"In this particular case, both the pedestrian and the bus were in motion, therefore, any blind spot would happen probably at the most a second in time," Fresno police detective Brian Hance testified.
The first video of the January 2018 incident came from a nearby store's surveillance camera.
[Ads /]
Security footage from the bus was introduced into evidence Tuesday.
Rudy Alderette told police he thought he ran over a box of pipes and admitted to stopping 10 minutes after the crash to inspect the bus.
The GPS aboard the bus shows Alderette returned to the scene multiple times during his morning route.
An afternoon field trip was arranged by Judge Alvin Harrell, who wanted to see the bus and its blind spot first hand.