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The second annual Ride for Freddy Rally will raise money for the New England Donor Bank.

Deb Coons sits on

a couch at her friend’s house in Scarborough talking about her son

who died two years ago after being fatally injured in a car crash.

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As she talks about Eric “Freddy” Frederick, she looks down at the

floor then lifts her head and smiles before describing her

19-year-old son.

“He just made

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people smile,” Coons said. “He was full of life, he was vibrant and

made you laugh. There isn’t a day that goes by where I’m not

thinking about him.”

Coons, along with

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her friends Mark and Susan Dobrovolny of Scarborough, are keeping

Freddy’s memory alive with the second annual Ride For Freddy Rally.

The motorcycle rally is scheduled for Aug. 22 and will begin at Big

Moose in Portland, ending at the Stadium in Portland. Participants

will ride for about two to three hours. There is also a live/silent

auction included in the event.

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The ride will not

only remember Freddy, but also raise money for the New England

Donor Bank. Freddy was an organ donor, and after his death, his

heart, liver, kidneys and veins were used to save four peoples’

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lives, Susan Dobrovolny said.

“We decided to

have a bike rally because we have found that the biker community is

very diverse and committed to raising money for charities,” she

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said. “Being an organ donor is so crucial and it really does save

lives. It was important to Freddy.”

Coons learned of

that importance on July 10, 2007. After spending the day at Salmon

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Falls in Hollis, Freddy and his friends were driving back to

Scarborough. Along a winding-stretch of road in Buxton, the driver

of the car in which Freddy was a passenger, lost control and

crashed into a tree. Freddy was fatally injured and rushed to Maine

Medical Center in Portland.

The police

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contacted Coons and told her Freddy had been seriously injured in

the Crash. She and her husband Paul raced to the hospital where

Freddy stayed alive for one day. After dying, his mother found out

about his wish to be an organ donor.

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“My husband

brought up the subject of organ donation with him while he was

applying to get a new license,” Deb Coons said. “After he passed, I

discovered he was an organ donor.”

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Knowing that her

son is helping people even after his death comforts Coons, she

said.

“From the very

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beginning, I put myself in the shoes of people who needed organs,”

she said. “I will never forget Freddy and I will always feel that

loss, but it is comforting to know that he was able to save lives

even after he was gone.”

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Mark Dobrovolny

remembers Freddy as a carefree teenager who loved sports and music.

Before his death, Freddy was working at the Clambake on Pine Point

Road and was saving money to attend Southern Maine Community

College.

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He was a good

friend of the Dobrovolny’s son, Brett, which is how Mark and

Suzanne grew to know him.

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“He was a great

kid,” said Mark, who rides his own Harley Davidson motorcycle. “We

loved having him around and we feel this rally is the best way to

raise money for organ donations and to remember him.”

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Freddy also

brought the Coons and Dobrovolnys together after his death.

“I think we had

spoken on the phone once before Freddy had died,” Coons said. “Now

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I consider them to be dear friends.”

Last year’s ride

drew about 50 riders and raised $4,200. Both Coons and the

Dobrovolnys expect about 100 riders to turnout this year.

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According to New

England Donor Bank statistics, there are more than 99,000 people in

the United States waiting for an organ transplant. More than 6,000

die waiting every year.

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Maine and several

other New England states have made it possible for residents to

register as donors when they obtain or renew a driver’s license, a

process that takes seconds and is legally binding. About 25 percent

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of Maine drivers are registered organ donors. There is no cost to

be an organ donor.

“It’s so simple

and doesn’t take a lot of time,” Susan Dobrovolny said.

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If a

non-registered person dies suddenly in a Maine hospital and the

organs are in a condition to be donated, the hospital notifies the

Organ Bank, which sends a representative to meet with the next of

kin. About 65 percent of the time, the family agrees to donate

their loved one’s organ’s, according to the Organ Bank’s

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statistics. One organ donor can save the lives of up to eight

people.

The recipient of

Freddy’s heart actually lives just 15 minutes from Deb Coons.

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“He used to be in

the same pee wee football league that Freddy played in,” Coons

said. “It’s amazing to think that Freddy’s heart gave this man

another chance at life.”

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Deb Coons, left, of Scarborough, holds a photo of her son Eric Leighton “Freddy” Frederick, who died in 2007 after an automobile crash. Coons and her friends, Mark and Susan Dobrovolny, are spearheading the Second Annual Ride for Freddy, which will raise money for the New England Donor Bank.
Photo by Al Edwards

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