logo
Brave 6'4 cyclist who stepped in to stop crazed man harassing kids at train stop is butchered to death

Brave 6'4 cyclist who stepped in to stop crazed man harassing kids at train stop is butchered to death

Daily Mail​4 days ago
A courageous cyclist was stabbed to death by a crazed man at a San Francisco train stop after he stepped in to protect a mother and her kids who were being harassed.
Colden Kimber, 28, was fatally jabbed in the neck with a six-inch blade on July 26 while waiting at a Muni stop in the Ingleside neighborhood with his girlfriend.
The couple had just gone on a date before making their way to the stop that was surrounded by children and families when Sean Collins, 29, walked up.
As they waited, Kimber decided to bravely get in between Collins and a woman with her children as he shouted: 'Oh you think you are better than me' and 'You are scared of me,' court documents obtained by KGO said.
While 6'4in Kimber stood directly in front of Collins as the train approached, the knifeman 'stabbed the unsuspecting victim on the right side of his neck,' records showed.
Following the 'completely and utterly unprovoked' attack, Kimber stopped moving as blood gushed out of his neck, the court filing read.
He was rushed to San Francisco General Hospital where he died after undergoing surgery.
Shortly after the deadly incident, Collins was found covered in blood by police blocks away from the scene and taken into custody.
Surveillance footage from a nearby restaurant also captured Collins walking in the area dressed in an all black outfit.
Collins has been charged with murder and is due in court for his arraignment on August 14.
It is unclear what drove him to stab Kimber, but according to court documents, the Superior Court of California received a report regarding his mental health. The results of the report remain unclear at this time.
Cameras at the Muni station captured the attack and two child witnesses, aged eight and 14, saw the horror stabbing occur, according to prosecutors.
Now, Kimber's loved ones are trying to make sense of the crime that took the life of someone who was trying to save others.
Bradley Woehl, the owner of American Cyclery, where Kimber worked, said he is a 'totally irreplaceable' employee who he will miss dearly.
'I'm going to miss him for his good nature and his kind spirit, and he really lived such an exemplary life. He was a very positive influence on myself and my staff,' Woehl told KGO.
He added that Kimber worked at the shop for years, where he would repair and even build new bikes for customers.
'He is totally irreplaceable as a worker, and totally irreplaceable as a friend and person and someone who had a good influence in my life,' his boss added.
Kimber discovered his passion for cycling when he took his mother's place in the New York triathlon after she had to drop out while fighting breast cancer, she told the San Francisco Chronicle.
'He had never ridden a bike on a road,' Lara Litchfield-Kimber said. 'The bikes were the things that stuck.'
After relocating from New York to California in 2020 with his long-time girlfriend, Kimber joined the Dolce Vita Cycling team as well as a semiprofessional ice hockey team in Vacaville.
He previously played hockey growing up, his mother explained.
Kimber loved biking so much he would be on his bike for 12,000-13,000 miles some years, per the Chronicle.
When he wasn't dabbling in sports, Kimber was studying kinesiology at San Francisco State University. He dreamed of working in sports medicine.
Kimber (pictured) discovered his passion for cycling when he took his mother's place in the New York triathlon after she had to drop out while fighting breast cancer
Litchfield-Kimber set up a GoFundMe page to help support their family during this difficult time.
'Colden unwillingly leaves behind a loving partner of seven years, his little sister who is just getting into road cycling, friends young and old, beloved cycling and hockey communities on both sides of the country, and his family who was immensely proud of the man he had become,' she wrote.
In addition to trying to plan services and memorials for her late son, his grieving mother said his family plans to 'simultaneously navigate a criminal homicide trial from across the country and all the unknowns of this unfamiliar process.'
As of Sunday afternoon more than $81,500 was raised to help them out.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Alligator Alcatraz is nothing more than ‘an oversized kennel' for migrants, ex-prison guard says
Alligator Alcatraz is nothing more than ‘an oversized kennel' for migrants, ex-prison guard says

The Independent

time16 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Alligator Alcatraz is nothing more than ‘an oversized kennel' for migrants, ex-prison guard says

A former corrections officer who worked at the already-notorious 'Alligator Alcatraz' migrant detention center in Florida has come forward to warn about the 'inhumane' conditions in which detainees are being held at the facility. Identified only as Lindsey to protect herself and her family from harassment, NBC's Miami affiliate interviewed the officer and compared conditions at the camp to 'an oversized kennel,' describing its poor facilities and inmates, many of whom are not criminals, living in fear. She said that she had been hired by the security company GardaWorld Federal Services and agreed to be paid $26 an hour on a five days on, two days off basis, which required her to live in a shared trailer on site with other staff. Lindsey said she began working at the camp on July 6. Still, her employment lasted only a week because she contracted Covid-19, had to self-isolate, and was then fired after being accused of 'altering medical paperwork submitted to the company,' an allegation she denied. 'It's inhumane the way that they're keeping their residents,' she told NBC6 of her experiences. 'When I got there, it was overwhelming. I thought it would get better. But it just never did.' She said that each tent at the facility contained eight large cages, holding 35 to 38 inmates, meaning that each tent housed close to 300 people. Discussing the conditions in which the detainees were being held, she said: 'They have no sunlight. There's no clock in there. They don't even know what time of the day it is. 'They have no access to showers. They shower every other day or every four days. The bathrooms are backed up because you [have] got so many people using them.' Lindsey added that rainwater poured into the tents on stormy days and that everyone present found themselves in a 'constant battle' with mosquitoes due to the Everglades' close and humid climate. 'Not everybody there is a criminal,' she said. 'These people are still human. They pulled them from their livelihood. They're scared. They don't speak our language.' Lindsey said the harsh conditions were also rough on staff: 'We had to use the porta-johns. We didn't have hot water half the time. Our bathrooms were backed up.' Asked about her motivations for coming forward, she said: 'I was fired. And yeah, I'm p****d off. But more so than ever, like, they're doing wrong.' Responding to Lindsey's accusations, Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told The Independent: 'Any allegations of 'highly inhumane conditions' at Alligator Alcatraz are FALSE. This is yet another attempt to smear ICE law enforcement who is already facing an 830 percent increase in assaults against them. 'Additionally, the facility is managed by the State of Florida through the Division of Emergency Management. Under President Trump's leadership, we are working at turbo speed on cost-effective and innovative ways to deliver on the American people's mandate for mass deportations of criminal illegal aliens.' The Independent also contacted GardaWorld and the Florida Division of Emergency Management for comment. Supporters of President Donald Trump warmly greeted the Alligator Alcatraz project when it was announced in June, cheerily buying up merchandise and delighting at the idea that would-be escapees would not be able to get far due to the perilous swampland surrounding the disused airfield on which it was built. Many detainees at the site have previously complained about the dire conditions, decrying the scarcity of food, lack of water for washing, and constant bright light depriving them of sleep.

Son of Briton arrested over ‘drowning' hit him with a car two years ago
Son of Briton arrested over ‘drowning' hit him with a car two years ago

Times

time17 minutes ago

  • Times

Son of Briton arrested over ‘drowning' hit him with a car two years ago

The husband of a woman whose father-in-law allegedly tried to drown her was jailed for harassing her and hitting his father with a car, The Times can reveal. Alex Gibbon, 34, pleaded guilty last year to assaulting his father, Mark, and harassing the mother of his two children, Jasmine Wyld, 33. The Times understands he hit Mark while driving an £80,000 Porsche Cayenne in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, in May 2023. Mark, 62, was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder on Sunday after he allegedly tried to drown his daughter-in-law, Wyld, in a row over his will. Wyld, a hairdresser, was left with a scratch on her chest and fearing for her life after the alleged attack in a swimming pool at a luxury resort near Walt Disney World, Florida. Mark, a lighting technician who has worked on music videos for musicians including Ed Sheeran, alleged that he and Wyld had been drinking when the row occurred. He has been charged with attempted second-degree murder and battery and will appear in court next month. Mark was staying with his family at the luxury Solterra Resort in Davenport, near Walt Disney World, when he got into an argument over the 'stipulations of his will'. Alex Gibbon and Jasmine Wyld It is claimed that during the disagreement, Mark repeatedly tried to push Wyld under the water. This allegedly prompted his nine-year-old granddaughter to jump into the pool and try to save her mother. Police officers at Polk county sheriff's office said Mark pushed her away. The police said: 'She [Wyld] advised that she could not breathe and believed that she was going to drown. [She] advised that she had to fight Mark in order to get away from him and from under the water but he kept pushing her back under.' Mark, from Beaconsfield, allegedly only stopped when two onlookers told him they had called the sheriff's office. He was taken into custody at about 5.20pm last Sunday. It is said that he admitted pushing his daughter-in-law under the water but denied trying to drown her. He is said to have claimed they were drinking when they got into a row. His son had previously worked with him at his film and television lighting firm Ultralight but resigned as director in April 2023. Mark has since renamed the company as MRG Lighting and he is listed as the sole director. Mark Gibbon's home in Beaconsfield, Bukinghamshire TOBY SHEPHEARD FOR THE TIMES Alex pleaded guilty in February last year to causing serious injury by dangerous driving and harassment without violence. He was sentenced at Aylesbury crown court to a total of 25 months' imprisonment, 36 months' disqualification from driving a five-year restraining order, and surcharge. The court was told that he had been subject to a community order at the time of the offences. Mark has worked on television and film sets as well as on music videos for performers such as Sam Smith and Paloma Faith. Grady Judd, the Polk county sheriff, said: 'It's great that Polk county draws visitors from all across the world but we expect vacationers to behave while they visit with us, just as we expect our lifelong residents to do the same. Because Mr Gibbon couldn't control his anger, he may find himself spending a lot more time in Florida than he had anticipated.'

Soldiers given medals for tackling gunman who shot five at Georgia base
Soldiers given medals for tackling gunman who shot five at Georgia base

The Guardian

time17 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Soldiers given medals for tackling gunman who shot five at Georgia base

Half a dozen soldiers at a Georgia army base have been awarded medals for tackling an armed assailant accused of shooting five people and then giving aid to their wounded colleagues, three of whom have now been released from hospital. Sgt Quornelius Radford, 28, who was assigned to Fort Stewart, is accused of using a personal handgun to shoot five of his fellow soldiers on Wednesday before he was quickly tackled by other troops. Army officials would not speculate about a motive. 'The fast action of these soldiers under stress and under trauma and under fire absolutely saved lives from being lost,' the army secretary, Dan Driscoll, said at a news briefing on Thursday morning. 'One of the soldiers tackled the person, so just think about this – they were unarmed and ran at and tackled an armed person who they knew was actively shooting their buddies, their colleagues, their fellow soldiers. 'Another soldier jumped on top of the person to subdue them until federal law enforcement was able to arrive.' According to CNN, the soldier who was the first to subdue the suspect has been named by the army as Staff Sgt Aaron Turner, with Master Sgt Justin Thomas helping to keep him restrained. Four other soldiers tended to the wounded, according to Driscoll. One of them, Staff Sgt Melissa Taylor, said she was in her office when she heard a fellow soldier 'yelling that a gunshot went off'. After peering into the hallway and seeing smoke, she noticed a soldier lying on the ground. 'I immediately sprinted over to the soldier and started rendering aid. He had been shot. And so I was rendering aid to him, while the first sergeant started calling medics,' she told reporters. The six soldiers were awarded the meritorious service medal for 'outstanding non-combat meritorious achievement or service' on Thursday. The shooting occurred in the 2nd armored brigade combat team area, where Radford worked. Brig Gen John Lubas, commander of the third infantry division and Fort Stewart-Hunter army airfield, said two of the five soldiers who were shot remain hospitalized, said in comments reported by CNN. 'One solider remains as an in-patient at Winn Army [community hospital] right here on Fort Stewart. She's doing very well, in high spirits,' Lubas said. 'Of course, she's got a little bit of a road to recovery. We're hopeful she may be released as early as this weekend but that will just depend on how things heal up over the next couple of days.' Another solider who was more seriously injured is recovering at Savannah Memorial community hospital, about 45 miles from the base, the general said. 'She's got a little bit longer road to recovery. The doctors are very positive, but I think it's going to take her a big longer to recover. They're very hopeful she's going to make a complete recovery.' The other three shooting survivors were released yesterday, according to Lubas. The Army has not identified them nor the nature of their injuries. According to the New York Times, Radford sent a text message to his aunt on Wednesday morning which said that he 'loved everybody, and that he'll be in a better place because he was about to go and do something'. Radford's father told the Times he hadn't noticed anything unusual about his son's behavior recently, and didn't know what might have led him to attack his fellow soldiers. Radford remains in custody.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store