Was an Anti-Seat Belt Law Advocate Killed in an Automobile Accident?

Authored by snopes.com and submitted by InevitableJudgement

Despite the vital role automobile seat belts have played in saving thousands and thousands of lives over the last several decades, there is still a group of drivers and passengers who are determined not to wear them, for any number of reasons: because they find them too uncomfortable or confining, because they don’t believe in their efficacy, because they’ve heard that wearing seat belts might actually cost them their lives in certain types of accidents, or because they resent as an unwarranted intrusion of government into private life the plethora of laws now requiring motorists to buckle up.

In this vein, we note with a sense of both sadness and irony a couple of articles recently called to our attention. The first is a 17 September 2004 editorial published in the Daily Nebraskan and entitled “Individual Rights Buckle Under Seat Belt Laws,” by Derek Kieper, a 21-year-old senior at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, in which the writer inveighed against mandatory seat belt laws, opining that “Uncle Sam is not here to regulate every facet of life no matter the consequences,” and that “Democrats and Republicans alike should stand together to stop these laws that are incongruous with the ideals of both parties.” In the midst of his editorial he noted:

As laws become increasingly strict for seat belts, fewer people will respond positively by buckling up in response to the laws. There seems to be a die-hard group of non-wearers out there who simply do not wish to buckle up no matter what the government does. I belong to this group.

Evidently his words were far more prescient than any of us might have wanted, as an article in the 4 January 2005 Lincoln Journal Star reported that Mr. Kieper not only died in a car crash, but the tragic mishap that claimed his life was the very type of accident in which seat belts have proved so effective in saving lives by preventing passengers from being ejected from vehicles:

Derek Kieper was a smart, funny, intense young man who relished a good debate and would do anything for his friends. Kieper, a 21-year-old senior at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, died early Tuesday morning when the Ford Explorer he was a passenger in traveled off an icy section of Interstate 80 and rolled several times in a ditch. Kieper, who was riding in the back seat of the Explorer, was ejected from the vehicle. Two others in the vehicle, including the driver, Luke Havermann of Ogallala, and the front-seat passenger, Nick Uphoff of Randolph Air Force Base in Texas, sustained non-life threatening injuries. Havermann and Uphoff, both 21, were being treated at BryanLGH Medical Center West. Derek, who was thrown from the vehicle, was not wearing a seat belt, [Capt. Joe Lefler of the Lancaster County Sheriff’s Office] said. He said Havermann and Uphoff were wearing seat belts at the time.

In a similar vein, in July 2011 a helmetless motorcyclist participating in a ride to protest mandatory helmet laws was killed when he was thrown over the handlebars of his motorcycle in Onondaga, New York:

Trobasaurasrex on June 2nd, 2020 at 07:58 UTC »

I went to high school with Derek. I was in after school activities with him. I've participated in the debates that the article says he was so fond of.

I knew the driver of the vehicle by way of friends of family.

Others in this thread say that people besides the individual not wearing their seat belt can be affected because a human body being thrown can hit someone else... That's not the only way.

The driver of the vehicle was emotionally and mentally affected by this accident for years.

He "killed" his friend.

The legal system went after him because he allowed one of his passengers to be in his vehicle without a seat belt.

Principles of libertarianism and legal issues aside, I have a hard time believing that had Derek known his actions would do that to his friend that he would've persisted in his dedication to his beliefs.

I knew Derek, I knew his family, I'm sorry for them.

His friend didn't deserve what Derek did to him.

RunDNA on June 2nd, 2020 at 07:31 UTC »

His anti-seatbelt editorial was published on 17 September 2004.

He died only three and a half months later on 4 January 2005.

PM_ME_A_PLANE_TICKET on June 2nd, 2020 at 07:12 UTC »

He died doing what he loved.