Author name: C-CAR

Three motorcyclists injured in Cajon Pass crash

Three motorcycle riders were treated for injuries Wednesday morning after their bikes crashed on the 15 Freeway just south of Oak Hill Road.

All were taken to local hospitals with non-life-threatening injuries, authorities said.

The crash occurred just before 8:30 a.m. in the northbound lanes of the 15.

Lynn Elbe, 71, of Ohio lost control of his Harley Davidson motorcycle and was knocked off his bike, authorities said.

The crash caused two other riders to fall to avoid a collision. They were identified as George Mocabee, 64, of Upland and William Ray, 64, of Las Vegas.

The incident caused traffic delays in the Cajon Pass for several hours.

— Staff Report

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Free bus and train rides for bicyclists today in many Los Angeles County cities

LOS ANGELES — Metro will provide free bus and train rides for Los Angeles County bicyclists today as part of “Bike to Work Day,” one of several events being held for the Bike Week LA bicycle and pedestrian safety campaign.

Along with Metro, other Los Angeles County transit providers that will be offering free rides throughout the day are Santa Monica’s Big Blue Bus, Commerce, Culver City Bus, Glendale Beeline, Long Beach Transit, Montebello Bus Lines, Norwalk Transit, Torrance Transit, LADOT, Beach Cities Transit, City of El Monte Transit, Pasadena ARTS and Carson.

Those who board participating buses and trains with a bicycle or bike helmet will ride for free. Additionally, Metrolink will offer free transit rides for bicyclists through the week.

More than 60 bicycle pit stops will be manned by schools, workplaces, advocacy groups and other local organizations, according to Metro. Free giveaways, refreshments and bicycling information will be available at the various pit stop locations.

People who pledge to bike to work may also be eligible to win prizes by posting pictures of their commutes on Twitter or Instagram with BikeWeekLA or pledging online at www.metro.net/bikeweek. Prizes include a REI Novarra Buzz city bike.

For a map of bicycle pit stop locations, visit www.metro.net/bikeweek.

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3-car Pomona crash leaves 1 dead, several injured

A Pomona man was killed and several others hurt in a crash late Wednesday night.

The unidentified man was killed just before 11 p.m. in the area of Holt Avenue and Weber Street in a collision involving three vehicles, according to a Pomona police news release.

The 41-year-old man was the driver and only occupant in a Toyota Corolla. His name has not been released pending notification of next of kin.

The occupants of the other vehicles involved suffered minor to moderate injuries and were treated at local hospitals, authorities said.

Anyone with information about the collision is asked to call the Traffic Services Bureau at 909-620-2081.

— Staff report

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3-car Pomona crash leaves 1 dead, 3 injured

POMONA — A man was killed and three people suffered minor injuries in a three-car collision in Pomona, police said today.

The collision was reported near the intersection of West Holt Avenue and North Weber Street around 10:50 p.m. Wednesday, Pomona police Sgt. Iain Miller said. The cause of the collision was being investigated, he said.

No information was immediately released about the man who was killed. The three people injured were hospitalized, police said.

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Trial for Fontana woman could start by year’s end in 60 Freeway crash that killed six

If lawyers for 22-year-old Olivia Carolee Culbreath of Fontana are unable to reach a settlement with prosecutors in the wrong-way crash that killed six people last year on the 60 Freeway in Diamond Bar, a trial on murder charges could start later this year.

The news came during a pretrial hearing Wednesday for Culbreath at the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center in downtown Los Angeles.

Judge Sam Ohta told the lawyers that the case could be settled if there was a pre-trial agreement, and if there is a trial, that it would be at the end of the year, said Robert Sheahen, one of Culbreath’s defense lawyers.

“The judge feels like its the kind of case that shouldn’t go to trial,” Sheahen said. “We would be open to a settlement, but it’s too early in the case right now.”

Elizabeth Padilla, the Los Angeles County deputy district attorney assigned to the case, could not be reached for comment.

Culbreath was late to Wednesday’s pretrial conference.

“She’s still in a wheelchair,” Sheahen said. “It’s still a terrible situation for her. She’s deeply remorseful for everything. She would go in for life. Her sister is dead,” he continued.

The main purpose of Wednesday’s hearing was to set trial dates.

Kelly Sheahen Gerner, another defense lawyer, said the next court date is Aug. 5 for pretrial and will begin the discovery compliance stage.

Gerner also said that because the judge’s courtroom is booked from September until the end of the year, a trial date might be set for early next year or the case could be sent to a different courtroom.

Culbreath is accused of driving a Chevrolet Camaro east on the westbound 60 Freeway when she crashed head-on into a Ford Explorer. Another vehicle crashed into the Explorer, authorities said .

Two passengers died in Culbreath’s car, one of them Culbreath’s sister, Maya, 24, of Rialto. The other was Kristin Young, 21 of Chino. Four Huntington Park residents were in the SUV and were thrown from the vehicle: Gregorio Mejia-Martinez, 47, Leticia Ibarra, 42, Jessica Mejia, 20, and Ester Delgado, 80.

Culbreath has been charged with six counts of murder and could serve a life sentence if convicted. She is being held at the Twin Towers Correctional Facility in Los Angeles in lieu of $6 million bail.

At a pretrial hearing in January, a judge determined there was sufficient evidence for Culbreath to be tried.

CHP Officer Matthew Lentz testified at the hearing that Culbreath’s blood had 0.15 percent blood alcohol concentration. In California, a motorist is considered impaired with a 0.08 percent blood alcohol concentration.

Culbreath pleaded not guilty at the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Courts Center in Los Angeles in February.

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Investigators: Amtrak train in deadly wreck was going over 100 mph

PHILADELPHIA >> The Amtrak train that crashed in Philadelphia, killing at least seven people, was hurtling at more than 100 mph before it ran off the rails along a sharp curve where the speed limit is just 50 mph, federal investigators said Wednesday.

The engineer who was at the controls refused to give a statement to authorities and left a police precinct with a lawyer, police said.

More than 200 people aboard the Washington-to-New York train were injured in the derailment that plunged screaming passengers into darkness and chaos Tuesday night. It was the nation’s deadliest train accident in nearly seven years.

“We are heartbroken by what has happened here,” Mayor Michael Nutter said.

Amtrak suspended all service until further notice along the Philadelphia-to-New York stretch of the nation’s busiest rail corridor — forcing thousands of travelers to find some other way to reach their destination — as investigators examined the wreckage and the tracks and gathered up other evidence.

The dead included an AP employee and a midshipman at the U.S. Naval Academy. Hospitals treated hundreds of victims for injuries that included burns and broken bones. At least 10 remained hospitalized in critical condition.

Nutter said some people remained unaccounted for, though he cautioned that some passengers listed on the Amtrak manifest might not have boarded the train, while others might not have checked in with authorities.

“We will not cease our efforts until we go through every vehicle,” the mayor said in the afternoon. He said rescuers expanded the search area and used dogs to look for victims in case someone was thrown from the wreckage.

Hours after recovering the locomotive’s data recorder, the National Transportation Safety Board tweeted that the train “exceeded 100 mph” before jumping the tracks in a decayed industrial neighborhood not far from the Delaware River shortly after 9 p.m.

The finding appeared to corroborate an Associated Press analysis of surveillance video from a spot along the tracks. The AP concluded from the footage that the train was speeding at approximately 107 mph moments before it entered the curve.

The speed limit is 70 mph just before the bend, the Federal Railroad Administration said.

Despite pressure from Congress and safety regulators, Amtrak had not installed along that section of track Positive Train Control, a technology that uses GPS, wireless radio and computers to prevent trains from going over the speed limit, the railroad agency said.

The engineer’s name was not immediately released.

The notoriously tight curve is not far from the site of the site of one of the deadliest train wrecks in U.S. history: the 1943 derailment of the Congressional Limited, bound from Washington to New York. Seventy-nine people were killed.

Amtrak inspected the stretch of track on Tuesday, just hours before the accident, and found no defects, according to the Federal Railroad Administration. In addition to the data recorder, the train had a video camera in its front end that could yield clues to what happened, said NTSB member Robert Sumwalt.

Passengers scrambled through the windows of torn and toppled cars to escape. One of the seven cars was severely mangled.

Jillian Jorgensen, 27, was seated in the second passenger car and said the train was going “fast enough for me to be worried” when it began to lurch to the right. Then the lights went out and Jorgensen was thrown from her seat.

She said she “flew across the train” and landed under some seats that had apparently broken loose from the floor.

Jorgensen, a reporter for The New York Observer who lives in Jersey City, New Jersey, said she wriggled free as fellow passengers screamed. She saw one man lying still, his face covered in blood, and a woman with a broken leg.

She climbed out an emergency exit window, and a firefighter helped her down a ladder to safety.

“It was terrifying and awful, and as it was happening it just did not feel like the kind of thing you could walk away from, so I feel very lucky,” Jorgensen said in an email to the AP. “The scene in the car I was in was total disarray, and people were clearly in a great deal of pain.”

Award-winning AP video software architect Jim Gaines, a 48-year-old father of two, was among the dead. Also killed was Justin Zemser, a 20-year-old Naval Academy midshipman from New York City.

Several people, including one man complaining of neck pain, were rolled away on stretchers. Others wobbled as they walked away or were put on buses.

“It’s incredible that so many people walked away from that scene last night. I saw people on this street behind us walking off of that train. I don’t know how that happened, but for the grace of God,” Nutter said.

The area where the wreck happened is known as Frankford Junction, situated in a neighborhood of warehouses, industrial buildings and homes.

Amtrak carries 11.6 million passengers a year along its busy Northeast Corridor, which runs between Washington and Boston.

Associated Press reporters Maryclaire Dale, Michael R. Sisak and Josh Cornfield in Philadelphia and Jack Gillum, Ted Bridis and Joan Lowy in Washington contributed to this story.

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No injuries reported in school bus crash in Chino Hills

A school bus with five students on board was involved in a crash Tuesday morning in Chino Hills, according to the California Highway Patrol incident log.

No injuries were reported in the crash just after 7 a.m. on Chino Avenue near Peyton Drive, according to reports.

The bus and a Kia Rio were involved in the crash.

Details about what led up to the crash were not immediately available.

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Man, 86, dies in Mother’s Day crash that killed woman, injured her 2 children

LAGUNA BEACH — An 86-year-old Laguna Woods resident has died from injuries he suffered in Laguna Beach in a two-vehicle crash that also killed a 31-year-old woman and injured her two children, police said today.

The man, who was hospitalized in grave condition, was pronounced dead at 5:42 p.m. Sunday, said Laguna Beach police Sgt. George Ramos.

The Mother’s Day crash at El Toro and Laguna Canyon roads occurred about 12:30 a.m. Sunday, Laguna Beach police Capt. Jason Kravetz said.

The woman, identified by the coroner’s office as Sandra Maldonado of Mission Viejo, was riding in a vehicle with her children, aged 5 and 8, and going northbound on El Toro Road when it appears her vehicle and a Honda Pilot traveling in the opposite direction sideswiped one another, he said.

Maldonado was rushed to Mission Hospital Regional Medical Center in Orange, where she died from her injuries. Her children were taken to Western Medical Center in Santa Ana, but they did not appear to be seriously hurt, Kravetz said.

“Alcohol doesn’t appear to be a factor. We’re still trying to determine which of the two vehicles veered out of their own traffic lanes,” the police captain said this morning.

The woman’s car spun around, and the Honda rolled off the road into some bushes, where it came to rest on its wheels, Kravetz said.

The wife of the Honda driver, who was the other occupant in the SUV, was not injured, he said.

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Alleged drunken driver crashes stolen car, kills Pomona woman

POMONA >> An allegedly drunken man driving a stolen vehicle was caught with help from bystanders after he reportedly tried to leave the scene of a crash that killed a woman in Pomona late Thursday night.

The woman has been identified as 32-year-old Marissa Leigh Vasquez of Pomona, according to a Pomona police release.

Around 10:45 p.m., Claremont police notified the Pomona Police ’s Dispatch Center that they were at the scene of a two-vehicle accident on Arrow Highway and Mariposa Street in Pomona where one of the people involved had been killed. The crash took place shortly after Claremont police discontinued a short pursuit with one of the vehicles for a Vehicle Code violation.

Pomona officers learned that the driver of the second vehicle ran off, but was quickly caught when several witnesses told officers which direction he fled, officials said.

Police believe the unidentified man was under the influence of alcohol. They also learned the vehicle he was driving was allegedly an unreported stolen vehicle.

He was taken to a Los Angeles hospital for minor injuries sustained in the collision and arrested for on suspicion of vehicular manslaughter and grand theft auto.

Anyone with information regarding this incident is asked to call the Traffic Division at 909-620-2081 or Crime Stoppers at 800-222-8477 or We-Tip 800-782-7463.

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