He was just walking home. One step, one hidden hazard, and a 70-year-old man’s life shattered on a San Diego sidewalk.
A broken neck. A broken back. A city now accused of looking the other way while its streets quietly turned deadly.
As lawyers circle and neighbors whisper, a single exposed bolt may cos… Continues…
What happened in Mission Hills is more than a freak accident; it is a collision between aging bodies and aging infrastructure. A small metal stump, left behind after a parking meter was removed,
allegedly turned an ordinary walk into a lifelong sentence of pain, dependence, and fear. For a man already relying on a mobility aid, the sidewalk he trusted became a trap he never saw coming.
His $35 million claim forces San Diego to confront a painful question: when a city knows its sidewalks are broken, how long before neglect becomes responsibility? Residents say this hazard wasn’t alone—
other jagged remnants, lifted slabs, and root-buckled paths mark daily routes. Whether the city pays or fights, the case stands as a warning:
when public space is treated as an afterthought, the cost is eventually paid in human lives, not just legal settlements.