A motorcyclist is lying in a hospital bed right now after a hit-and-run on southbound I-880 near the A Street exit, and the driver who caused it just… kept going.
Here's what we know: On the morning of April 16th, around 7:25 AM, a rider was traveling in the FasTrak lane on southbound 880 when an older gold or brown truck — described as an early 2000s model with standard white California plates and blue lettering — slammed on the brakes and cut hard right across double white lines directly into the motorcyclist's path. The rider went down. The truck kept rolling.
The victim is now hospitalized for an indeterminate amount of time and is actively searching for anyone who may have witnessed the crash or captured dashcam footage.
Let's be blunt: cutting across double white lines from a FasTrak lane is illegal, reckless, and in this case, nearly lethal. Fleeing the scene after causing a collision makes it exponentially worse. California law treats hit-and-run causing injury as a felony — and rightfully so. If you put someone in the hospital and drive away, you deserve everything the penal code throws at you.
But here's the uncomfortable reality that plays out on Bay Area freeways every single day: enforcement is practically nonexistent. CHP is stretched thin, reckless driving has become normalized, and drivers who treat lane markings as suggestions face virtually zero consequences — until someone ends up in a trauma ward. As one Bay Area commuter put it, "580 isn't half as bad as 880 in that stretch." Anyone who regularly drives the 880 corridor knows exactly what they mean. It's lawless out there.
This isn't a problem that gets solved by more bike lanes downtown or another transit feasibility study. It gets solved by actually enforcing traffic laws and holding dangerous drivers accountable — starting with finding the person who did this.
If you were on southbound I-880 near the A Street exit on April 16th around 7:25 AM and saw anything — or if your dashcam caught footage — reach out to CHP. Someone in a hospital bed is counting on it.
