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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 7:57 p.m., Thursday, June 5, 2008

Lives broken by unsolved '07 Nimitz hit-and-run

By Rod Ohira
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Suzanne Jackson, widowed by hit and run, seeks closure of unresolved case.

Jeff Widener/The Honolulu Advertiser

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Suzanne Jackson recalled cradling her critically injured and unconscious husband on the roadway, begging him not to die.

For a period she described as "longer than eternity," Jackson urged her husband of four years to "just hang on, you can't leave us like this." City emergency medical personnel rushed Air Force Lt. Col (select) John Jackson, 36, to The Queen's Medical Center where he died in the emergency room, the victim of an early morning hit-and-run last Nov. 10 on North Nimitz Highway between Ohohia Street and Camp Catlin Road.

John Jackson's Harley Davidson had broken down and his wife and son had gone to help him bring it back to Hickam.

A man and woman fled from a gold 2002 Chevy Astro van which struck Jackson and his son, 18-year-old Michael Quintero, as they were putting lights on a motorcycle trailer hitched to a red Mustang that Suzanne Jackson was seated in.

"A woman got out of the van, stepped over my son who was lying hurt on the ground and ran," Suzanne Jackson said.

Police have the Chevy van, know who the registered owner is but need information on the driver and passenger to make a criminal case.

Hit-and-run, which falls under the statute of failure-to-render aid in accidents involving deaths or serious injuries, arrests are hard to make without help from witnesses or confessions. The Jackson case was among four fatal hit and runs investigated last year and one of two that remain unresolved.

Also, police said 18 of 22 non-fatal hit and runs from 2007 and six cases from January through May of this year remain open.

Suzanne Jackson is moving to Colorado Springs Saturday with her son and 16-year-old daughter, Breeanna Quintero, and made a public plea for closure today through Honolulu CrimeStoppers.

"I know shock and adrenaline flow took over for them to run," Jackson said, "but I believe they should have come forward by now."

Jackson remains broken-hearted six months after the 3:40 a.m. accident, unable to sleep at nights for more than a couple of hours and enduring what she calls "daymares" every day.

Memories of "stress relief" motorcycle rides on the back of her husband's Harley twice or three times a week, the pride she felt when he earned his second master's degree shortly before the accident, his promotion, and their future plans strips her heart of feeling. She describes her grieving as "stoic" and attributes it to her Native American roots as a member of an Apache tribe from Albuquerque.

"Sure, I ask why (it happened) everyday when he was doing everything right — wearing a bright orange safety vest; had all our car doors open, the hood up and flasher on," Jackson said of her husband, a Southeast Asia intelligence specialist who was slated for deployment to Iraq last month.

Hickam neighbors Maj. David and Toni Schlosser said Jackson shows little outward emotion of the hurt she feels.

"She's secluded herself and I know it's very lonely for her because they did everything together," Toni Schlosser said.

Anyone with information about the accident can call CrimeStoppers at 955-8300 or *CRIME on a cellphone.

Sgt. Kim Buffett, Honolulu CrimeStoppers coordinator, said police are working on a proposed bill which would hold registered owners more accountable for crimes involving their vehicles.

Reach Rod Ohira at rohira@honoluluadvertiser.com.