Published November 02, 2008 08:23 pm - ANDERSON — Area attorneys at law are mourning the loss of one of their own today, while keeping his injured wife in their prayers as she lies in the critical care unit after Saturday’s motorcycle accident.
8:24 p.m. UPDATE: Anderson lawyer dies of injuries
Robert Cowles remembered as ‘man of the people’
ANDERSON — Area attorneys at law are mourning the loss of one of their own today, while keeping his injured wife in their prayers as she lies in the critical care unit after Saturday’s motorcycle accident.
Anderson lawyer Robert Cowles, 53, died around 4:30 a.m. Sunday from injuries suffered during a motorcycle accident in Lapel.
His wife, Sally Cowles, was riding the motorcycle with him and remained in the cardiovascular intensive care unit at Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis. As of 8 p.m. Sunday, a hospital representative said she was in stable condition after undergoing surgery.
The accident occurred at 6:01 p.m. Saturday, according to Madison County Sheriff Ron Richardson. Richardson said the Cowleses were headed south on Indiana 13 near Exit 14 at Interstate 69 when the vehicle in front of them turned right onto the interstate.
An oncoming 2005 Chevy Equinox driven by Angela Acker of Pendleton was turning left onto the same ramp and did not see the 1979 Harley-Davidson approaching. “As she was coming north, her plans were to make a left turn onto the interstate. She observed the oncoming vehicle but she did not see the motorcycle behind that vehicle.”
Richardson said Acker’s vehicle crossed the center line into the path of the Cowleses when the collision occurred.
According to Richardson, Robert Cowles was conscious at the scene of the accident when emergency personnel arrived and was even able to tell hospital officials his name after being taken to Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis by helicopter. Sally Cowles was unconscious at the scene of the accident and remained in critical condition until going into surgery Sunday afternoon. After the surgery, her condition improved but she remained in the intensive care unit.
Marion County Deputy Coroner William Arnold ruled that Cowles’ cause of death was blunt force trauma and loss of blood.
Paul Baylor, a fellow lawyer in Anderson, remembered Cowles on Sunday as one of the most well-liked attorneys in Anderson. “Even though he was probably one of the most respected lawyers in town and he had worked with people on both sides of the political fence, he had a way of relating to people of all walks of life.”
“He was really a man of the people,” Baylor said.
Baylor met Cowles in 2001 and recently signed the attorney’s petition to join the Fellowship 681 F&AM in Anderson.
“It leaves a big hole there because he was someone who a lot of people trusted and treated as a confidant. Now that he’s gone, it really leaves a void,” Baylor said.
Rodney Cummings, former Madison County prosecutor and now a candidate for Superior Court judge, was injured in a vehicle accident about 90 minutes after Cowles’ accident Saturday.
Cummings, who suffered four broken ribs, a severe head injury and a punctured lung from an accident at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, said from his hospital bed Sunday that he and Cowles had been close friends for over 50 years.
The two first met in kindergarten and practically lived at one another’s homes as children, he said.