HOLIDAY — Glenn Zimmerman put security cameras on his house and pointed them toward an intersection where a woman was killed in a crash a few years ago.

He thought it might happen, again. On Monday, it did.

Zimmerman, 56, was in his back yard when he heard sirens on his road. He ignored them at first until he saw an emergency vehicle stop nearby. He walked around and saw a motorized wheelchair standing in the intersection.

People were kneeling around the body of Larry Small, 77, of Holiday. They covered him in towels as blood pooled near his head.

Zimmerman said a prayer. He knew what must have happened. He went back inside his home and wrote his contact information down so investigators could come scan through his security video.

Small died at the scene after the driver of red or magenta, older-model minivan slammed into him at about 12:25 p.m., according to Florida Highway Patrol. Small was riding his wheelchair south in a crosswalk along the east side of Pinehurst Drive and Moog Road in Holiday.

The driver fled and the minivan was last seen heading west on Moog Road, troopers said. It may have had damage to the front, the hood or the windshield.

Troopers later seized a 1991 Dodge minivan found near the scene. A 90-year-old man is the registered owner of the minivan and was identified as a person of interest in the crash, troopers said. They did not identify the man.

He lives close to the scene and has been cooperative with troopers. No arrests have been made.

Nichol Lynn Barker, 34, of Holiday, died at the same intersection in July 2017 after the car she was driving collided head-on with another vehicle that turned into her path.

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That's the crash that prompted Zimmerman put up his security cameras.

On Monday, the cameras captured the minivan hitting Small as Small entered the crosswalk area. Small was tossed into the air from the collision and landed on his head. The minivan stopped for a moment and then drove around the body.

Zimmerman said he knew Small and often saw him riding his motorized wheelchair to nearby shopping centers. Zimmerman and his wife would trim the sidewalk around his house and Small would thank him for making it easier to navigate. He said Small couldn't see well and carried a cane, but he knew how to direct himself through the area well.

"He was a real pleasant man," Zimmerman. "You would see him two or three times a day out and about in the neighborhood."

The neighborhood is aware of how people speed down the road, Zimmerman said. He hopes to see something change.

At a County Commission meeting Tuesday, Kelly Miller, president of Colonial Hills Civic Association, asked the commission to lower the speed limit from 30 mph to 25 mph in the area of the crash. A similar request was previously denied.

Commissioner Kathryn Starkey remembers seeing Small riding his wheelchair in the area, she told the Tampa Bay Times after the meeting. Starkey also has noticed more people walking in the area now that sidewalks have been installed there. Speed bumps aren't the answer, she said, because they can't be placed on collector roads like Moog Road where the crash happened.

"I don't know yet if this was caused by someone speeding, but I just want to keep everyone safe," she said.

The collision was the latest of at least three hit-and-runs involving a pedestrian during the past two weeks.

James Elliott, 71, of Hudson, was in critical condition after a hit-and-run crash June 23. He was walking along the shoulder of southbound U.S. 41, north of Twin Oaks Road, when he was hit.

Leon Gilbert-Bailey, 24, of Dade City, was hit and killed a day before Elliott.

Gilbert-Bailey was walking along the west shoulder of U.S. 301 near Gould Road when a driver hit and killed him.

Times staff writer Sarah Verschoor and Times researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report. Contact Paige Fry at pfry@tampabay.com. Follow @paigexfry.