Biker fights for his sight after road rage attack
A BIKER fears he could go blind after being repeatedly punched in the face in a vicious road rage attack.
Nicolas Pacheco, who was still wearing his crash helmet, was hit so hard that its visor smashed, gashing his eyelid and damaging his vision.
Doctors cannot say if he will regain sight in his right eye.
The 36-year-old was riding his motorcycle on the A283, near the Old Cement Works at Upper Beeding, when he was subjected to the unprovoked attack which left him drifting in and out of consciousness.
Mr Pacheco, a learner driver, claimed that despite a queue of traffic witnessing the assault, not one person went to his aid.
He said: “My face is pretty bad and I am scared about it but I suppose it could have been a lot worse.”
The coffee shop manager, of Janeston Court, Wilbury Crescent, Hove, said his attacker had been so close behind him he could not read his number plate.
He said: “The driver came up really close to my motorcycle and tried pushing me to go faster but I am just a learner and have L plates on my bike. I thought he was going to run me off the road.”
Mr Pacheco said the man eventually cut between him and another car to overtake and then braked violently, forcing him to slam his own brakes on to avoid a collision.
He said before he had chance to get off his bike, the man got out of his car and began punching him in the face.
He said: “He broke my visor and continued to punch me. My bike fell on top of me and he punched me while I was on the floor.
“I did not have a chance to defend myself. He eventually left and drove away but all the cars which were queued up just drove around me.
“A motorcyclist going the other way turned round and came over to help me and called for an ambulance.”
Mr Pacheco was taken to the Royal Sussex County Hospital in Brighton after the incident, which happened at about 5pm on Sunday, and was kept in overnight.
He suffered cuts to the right side of his face and hardly has any vision in his right eye. Doctors are unable to tell him whether his sight will recover.
He said: “I am a bit shaken, not just because of what happened but because of the reaction of people in general. If you see someone lying in the road, you would go and help them. But apart from the motorcyclist, no one stopped. The whole incident was quite frightening and it happened so quickly.”
Marc Oakden, Mr Pacheco’s partner, said doctors told him the pressure caused by swelling around the eye could be contributing to his loss of sight.
He said: “He’s very depressed and extremely scared. I was totally shocked and devastated when I saw him. He would never do anything wrong to anybody. He was just out for a harmless ride on his bike and this happened.”
Mr Pacheco said the attacker was foreign, possibly Portuguese, in his mid-forties, 6ft 1in and heavily built, with very short, light hair, which was balding. He spoke with a heavy accent.
He was driving a silver car, possibly a Rover, with a girl, aged about eight, in the passenger seat.
The attack has been reported to Sussex Police who are asking anyone who witnessed it to call them on 0845 6070999.