Generous group helps make new prosthetic for local war vet and surprises him with new motorcycle

CLEVELAND, Ohio (WJW ) — An innovative event is giving a local war veteran a big surprise and the chance to once again hit the open road. Sgt. Charles Zollicoffer served three tours of duty with the Marines, then joined the Army and was getting ready to re-deploy overseas when he was hit by a drunk driver on his motorcycle. “The morning I was set to fly off that’s when I had the accident,” said Sgt. Zollicoffer. “Boom, that was it.” The driver left him for dead on S.R. 800 in Stark County, but luckily another man on a motorcycle who was headed to work stopped and saved his life. “I didn’t think he was gonna make it,” said Dave Bowman. Twenty-seven surgeries and four months later, Zollicoffer woke up at Aultman Hospital with his left leg amputated at the hip joint. Doctors told him it was a difficult amputation and that he would never walk again. “I said, ‘I will walk again; I don’t care if I have to take a 2×4 and duct tape, I will walk,’” said Zollicoffer. The father of three has been walking using a prosthetic leg, but has not been able to ride a motorcycle again— something he truly loved to do. Then, a friend and former colleague told him the good news. De Ann Williams, executive director of the Stark County Veterans Service Commission, nominated him to be part of the “Challenge America’s Makers for Veterans Event.” The event, which kicked off Friday night at St. Edward High School in Lakewood, combines teams of students, engineers, designers and physicians who develop solutions for veterans. The plans are then developed into finished product using 3D printers, metal making, and circuit boards among other means. “An incredible, but sometimes intense experience,” said senior Coleman Isner. […]

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