Published October 04, 2007 12:51 am - Mike Thomas was running before he dropped the first bouquet of a memorial to mark the spot where 18-year-old Catherine Delwiche lost her life, but he walked down the street to his house. “It didn’t feel right running away,” he said. “It did feel right running there, though.”
Tragedy has few answers
Runner’s death touches many
By Dan Nienaber
The Free Press
MANKATO
—
MSU athletic director and women’s cross country coach address situation at press conference.
Only some yellow paint and a growing pile of flowers marked the spot Wednesday where 18-year-old Catherine Delwiche lost her life.
Mike Thomas started the memorial in the patch of green space next to the Mankato Church of Christ parking lot. He jogged up to the area where Delwiche was hit by an SUV Tuesday and dropped a bouquet of purple, yellow and orange flowers.
He didn’t know Delwiche, but he’s a runner and said it would have felt wrong to run past the spot, the same spot he’s ambled by a couple of hundred times, without paying tribute to the freshman Minnesota State University student. He’d read she was a member of the cross country team and training for a meet when she was hit.
A group of Delwiche’s friends were there when Thomas jogged by at lunchtime Wednesday. They had spent the night at the hospital, where Laura Palmer, also 18 and a cross country team member, was being treated for injuries she received in the crash near the MSU campus at about 4 p.m. Tuesday. Palmer was riding her bike next to Delwiche when Dale Hoechst, 57, crossed a lane of traffic, hit the curb and plowed into the women.
Alex Johnson, a friend of both women, said Palmer remembers everything about the tragic crash.
“She got hit first and was lying on her side when she saw Caty flying over her head,” Johnson said. “Laura got up and tried to help her, but Caty didn’t have a pulse.”
Johnson was one of dozens of people who visited Palmer and comforted Delwiche’s family and friends at Immanuel St. Joseph’s Hospital Tuesday night. Clark Fillbrandt of Glencoe said his son wanted to be there but was too distraught to travel to Mankato after hearing that Delwiche, his date for last year’s prom at Glencoe-Silver Lake High School, was dead.
Fillbrandt was in Mankato on business Wednesday. He introduced himself to Johnson and three of Delwiche’s other college friends as they were leaving to get more flowers to add to the memorial Thomas had started.
Delwiche’s brother had called Fillbrandt’s son, Kenny, to tell him about the crash. A trip to Mankato was in the planning stages when Kenny found out how bad the crash was, his father said.
“He wanted to drive down right away, but I wouldn’t let him,” Clark Fillbrandt said. “I told him I’d meet him and we’d drive down together. When I finally got ahold of him again, he was just bawling uncontrollably and said Caty was dead.
“She was the greatest kid you could ever meet. She was intelligent, sweet, polite, an all-around great kid. She was the kind of child every parent wishes was their own — you wish every kid could turn out like her.”
Friends of the victims weren’t the only people gathering at the scene of the deadly crash Wednesday. Leaders from the State Patrol’s Mankato District office hosted a news conference there after the incident drew statewide attention.
They took questions from the media and explained it could be awhile before investigators have any solid answers as to why Hoechst’s Honda SUV crossed a lane of traffic, jumped the curb and traveled more than 50 yards before hitting the Church of Christ’s large sign.
So far, they know Delwiche and Palmer were on the sidewalk and had their backs to Hoechst’s vehicle, which was traveling south on Warren Street, said Lt. Dan Hilligoss. Instead of following a slight curve in the road, Hoechst crossed the northbound lane, hit the women, drove over a junction telephone box and finally stopped when his SUV hit the church’s large sign.