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Stanton Heights man sent to prison for 2008 hit-and-run
Tuesday, November 10, 2009

A Stanton Heights man was sent to prison yesterday for hitting and killing a 79-year-old pedestrian with his car last year in Lawrenceville and then leaving him lying on the street.

Tyrone H. Kirk pleaded guilty to reduced charges of homicide by vehicle and leaving the scene of a fatal accident. Allegheny County Judge David R. Cashman then sentenced him to 27 to 54 months in state prison followed by two years' probation.

According to an affidavit, Mr. Kirk, 34, turned himself in to police two days after he hit Harry Rakoczy on March 1, 2008, in the 4400 block of Butler Street at around 4:30 a.m. Police learned of the accident when a motorist saw the victim face down in the street, with cars swerving to miss him. He was dead when medical officials arrived. The medical examiner determined he died from blunt force trauma to the head and trunk.

Mr. Rakoczy, a city building inspector who worked for about 35 years as a beloved jack-of-all-trades at Arsenal Lanes bowling alley, had lived in Lawrenceville all his life. He was en route to the bowling alley in the early morning hours when he was struck by the car.

He had grown up around the corner from where the accident happened, said his son Anthony, 53, of Lincoln Place.

The victim's son said Mr. Rakoczy had played drums in a polka band called the Polka Dots in the late 1950s and early 1960s. He was widowed in 1963. He continued to polka dance with his girlfriend of over 30 years up until his death.

Anthony Rakoczy said he had "no compassion for [Mr. Kirk] at all ... because he drove away."

Mr. Kirk's attorney, William H. Difenderfer, said that he considered it rare to have a client who came forward of his own volition and helped police solve an unsolved homicide.

"They wouldn't even have had an idea of what happened or how it happened if he hadn't come in," he said.

Police reports indicated Mr. Kirk didn't know what he had hit and when he looked around, he didn't see anything near the car.

Mr. Difenderfer said his client didn't realize what had happened until he saw a news report about the hit-and-run. He turned himself in to police with an attorney present.

Gabrielle Banks can be reached at gbanks@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1370.
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First published on November 10, 2009 at 12:00 am