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Tag: car accident

  • 2 killed, 6 injured in Fairfax Co. car crash on Christmas – WTOP News

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    Two people have died and six others were injured after a car crash on the Capital Beltway in Fairfax County, Virginia, on Thursday night.

    Two people have died, and six others were injured after a car crash on the Capital Beltway in Fairfax County, Virginia, on Christmas.

    Virginia State Police are investigating a two-vehicle crash that happened on Interstate 495 around 10:40 p.m. on Thursday.

    In an email, a VSP spokesperson said six people were inside of a Toyota Sienna minivan when it collided with a Dodge Ram pickup truck with two passengers inside.

    Two passengers inside the minivan, a 75-year old woman and a 15-year-old, were taken to a local hospital where they later succumbed to their injuries and died, according to police.

    The two passengers in the pickup truck were also transported to the hospital. Police did not give details on their conditions.

    Officials believe the crash happened in the main lanes of I-495. The minivan was found in the eastbound express lanes and the truck was found in the main lanes.

    The crashes remain under investigation, and no further details have been released at this time.

    Editor’s Note: This story has been updated to correct the time of the crash.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Ciara Wells

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  • Elementary school student struck by car in Bowie – WTOP News

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    An elementary school student was hit by a car while walking home from school in Bowie on Friday.

    A young boy from Tulip Grove Elementary was hit while walking home near the intersection of Terra and Traymore Lanes.(WTOP/John Domen)

    An elementary school student was struck by a car while walking home from school in Bowie on Friday.

    The young boy from Tulip Grove Elementary was walking home near the intersection of Terra and Traymore Lanes.

    The child was conscious and breathing when he was taken to the hospital.

    There’s no crosswalk at the intersection the child was trying to cross.

    In a letter home to families, Principal Daleisha Myers asked parents to “discuss safety precautions with your child,” including looking both ways before crossing the street and avoiding distractions while in traffic.

    “We would also like to take this moment to remind all families to please drive slowly and carefully through the community, especially during pick-up and drop-off times,” Myers wrote.

    Police say the driver stayed on the scene.

    The crash remains under investigation.

    The county introduced stop sign cameras around the region earlier this year in hopes to keep pedestrians safe in areas where there’s busy road traffic.

    Before installing the cameras, some municipalities reported drivers would blow through stop signs without coming to a complete stop roughly 80% of the time, or more. The program gained momentum in the county after two kids were struck and killed while trying to cross the street on their walk to school in Riverdale in 2023.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    John Domen

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  • ‘Wild and dangerous’ police chase halts traffic on I-270 in Montgomery Co. – WTOP News

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    A “wild and dangerous police pursuit” that started in Frederick County, Maryland, came to a stop on Interstate 270 in Montgomery County.

    WTOP Traffic Reporter Dave Dildine reports on the wrong way driver during the police pursuit

    A “wild and dangerous police pursuit” that started in Frederick County, Maryland, came to a stop on Interstate 270 in Montgomery County.

    It happened Friday during the afternoon rush. WTOP’s Traffic Center fielded several calls from panicked listeners who said they saw someone driving southbound on I-270 “lane-splitting the northbound lanes and going head-first into oncoming traffic,” WTOP Traffic reporter Dave Dildine said.

    The Frederick County Sheriff’s Office said in a post on Facebook that its deputies were involved in the pursuit as it continued into Montgomery County. The driver of the vehicle, a man, was detained and the sheriff’s office said there is “no further threat to the community.”

    The pursuit came to a stop when the driver crashed near the Comus Road overpass in Clarksburg, Dildine said.

    WTOP’s news partner 7News reports that the man then jumped out of the car while holding a child, using them as a hostage.

    All lanes of I-270 were shutdown for more than an hour during the standoff. Hundreds of drivers idled in place between Route 121 and Route 109 as police worked to bring the situation under control.

    The Maryland State Highway Administration diverted northbound traffic at Father Hurley Boulevard while southbound drivers were sent onto Route 109 into Hyattstown. Long backups formed on nearby Route 355 and Route 27.

    All lanes of I-270 reopened shortly before 7 p.m.

    WTOP’s Abigail Constantino and Dave Dildine contributed to this report.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Ciara Wells

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  • Man killed in car crash after running red light in Arlington, police say

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    Arlington police are investigating a crash that killed a 32-year-old man early Sunday, Nov. 16, officials say.

    Arlington police are investigating a crash that killed a 32-year-old man early Sunday, Nov. 16, officials say.

    Courtesy: Fort Worth Star-Telegram archives

    Arlington police are investigating a crash that killed a 32-year-old man early Sunday, officials said.

    A Ford Explorer traveling northbound on South Cooper Street about 3:40 a.m. was hit by a Honda Civic headed westbound on Pioneer Parkway, police said in a news release. The Honda’s driver ran a red light, police said.

    The driver of the Explorer and two passengers were taken to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, according to police. The driver of the Honda was also taken to a hospital and died around three hours after the crash. The Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office has identified him as Walton Yohelis Rios-Vallejos.

    Investigators haven’t ruled out intoxication or speed as factors in the fatal accident, police said. The investigation is ongoing.

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  • ‘She’s a miracle’: How a co-worker turned caregiver is transforming a Virginia woman’s life – WTOP News

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    After a devastating car accident left Kitti Tong in a coma, her colleague Regina Richardson stepped in as caregiver and friend. Over the course of seven years, their bond helped Tong overcome several health and mental challenges.

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    How a co-worker turned caregiver is transforming a Virginia woman’s life

    Kitti Tong and Regina Richardson didn’t know each other very well before the incident that changed Tong’s life.

    They were co-workers at a hotel corporation in Maryland and bonded over their early morning arrivals and late night departures. They were both serious and eager to get their work done and make an impression.

    But on Nov. 12, 2018, a car hit Tong in a Rockville crosswalk while she was on the way home from work. Her employee badge flew off after the crash.

    The hospital needed a next of kin to call. Tong’s mother had passed away years earlier, so the hospital called the company’s vice president. He and Richardson rushed there.

    While their boss stood at a desk asking for Tong’s room, Richardson busted through the ICU doors.

    “For a while, it was very touch and go where we didn’t know what the outcome would be, but I knew what a fighter she was,” Richardson told WTOP.

    That was the start of a now yearslong relationship, during which Richardson has helped Tong recover from several brain surgeries, navigate physical and occupational therapy and find the right words when she can’t.

    Tong has aphasia, which leaves her sometimes struggling to understand others or have difficulty speaking herself.

    With help from the MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital, and Richardson’s care, Tong has hobbies and socializes with friends, capitalizing on a second chance at life.

    “She’s a miracle,” Richardson said. “Just through and through.”

    Immediately after the crash, Tong spent a month in a coma on life support. Every day she was there, Richardson visited.

    When it came time for Tong to be discharged, “there was no place else that she needed to be, except here, because I knew we could tackle it together,” Richardson said.

    Tong’s new reality took a toll. She became depressed, but determined with Richardson’s help.

    On some days, that meant reading Post-it notes on different objects around Richardson’s home. It meant learning how to get in and out of a car and up and down the stairs safely.

    They sang Christmas songs in July, “because that was able to be triggered earlier,” Richardson said. And they often communicated through pictures.

    In case Tong ever got lost, Richardson made sure she knew she lived near the Pentagon.

    After her initial five-month hospital stay, it took Tong a year to learn to walk again, and even longer to start speaking. At first, she started with short sentences.

    “Regina is an angel,” Tong said. “She helped me a lot to my journey. The OT, PT, the physical is fine, but my mental is not fine. My mental state feel like my suicide, but Regina helped me through a lot.”

    While they watch TV together and each have separate daily responsibilities, Richardson sometimes finds herself staring at the ceiling. It’s one of the few ways she can always be listening to be sure Tong is safe but also have alone time.

    It’s the approach Richardson took after Tong had a seizure in the shower. She moved quickly to protect Tong’s head and get her out.

    Sara Cappello, a senior physical therapist at MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital, said when patients “don’t have a bond like Regina had for Kitti, it’s so hard for patients who are going through a hard time like this to dig deep and find that internal motivation, because so much is happening to them.”

    The outcome, Cappello said, is “a miracle, but it also just goes to show how strong she is.”

    Tong has a poster with photos at various stages of her recovery, and a notebook with words she once jotted down. On the one year anniversary of the crash, she visited the hospital, offering the staff a glimpse at the impact of their work.

    On Wednesday night, the seven-year anniversary, which always falls during National Family Caregivers Month, she celebrated with dinner.

    “She is my caregiver, but she’s my sister,” Tong said.

    “There’s nothing more important than caregiving that I’ve done in my life,” Richardson said.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Scott Gelman

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  • Old video of cable car accident falsely linked to new system in India’s Uttar Pradesh

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    India’s first urban cable car system began trial runs in October, which is built in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home constituency, Varanasi, in Uttar Pradesh. Social media users have shared a clip with a false claim it showed an accident at the system’s debut trip. But the journalist who covered the actual event shown in the video told AFP it was filmed in Dongargarh in central India in April.

    “Modi built a four-kilometre (2.4-mile) ropeway in Varanasi at a cost of eight billion rupees ($95 million). The carriage broke and fell down during its debut trip — and interestingly, a BJP leader was also in it,” reads a Hindi-language Facebook post on October 1, 2025, referring to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party.

    The 26-second video shows a cable car setting off before cutting to a scene of a crashed gondola and injured passengers.

    Screenshot of the false Facebook post captured on October 8, 2025, with a red X added by AFP

    The clip appeared with similar claims on Instagram and X as trial runs of India’s first urban public transport ropeway began in Varanasi on October 2, the ANI news agency reported (archived link).

    Aimed at improving the city’s urban mobility, the 3.8-kilometre (2.36-mile) corridor will use 148 gondolas to transport up to 100,000 passengers a day.

    But the video actually shows a cable car accident in the neighbouring Chhattisgarh state.

    A reverse image search on Google using keyframes found the same video uploaded on Instagram on April 25, 2025 (archived link).

    The post captioned in Hindi reads in part: “Ropeway trolley broke in Dongargarh, BJP leader narrowly escaped, was brought to Rajnandgaon Sanjeevani Hospital.”

    Rajnandgaon district in Chhattisgarh is located 660 kilometres (410 miles) from Varanasi.

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the false post (L) and the Instagram video</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the false post (L) and the Instagram video

    The caption credits the report to Monaj Dewangan, a reporter with the local news outlet Correct News CG, who told AFP the footage was filmed in Chhattisgarh.

    “The ropeway suddenly crashed. The BJP leader, onboard along with other passengers, sustained injuries. The injured were rushed to a nearby hospital,” he said on October 8, 2025. 

    Local media outlets reporting the accident said a gondola carrying devotees to the Bamleshwari temple in Dongargarh detached from the cable and fell to the ground, injuring some BJP leaders among others (archived here, here and here).

    ANI published a clip on October 3 on a trial run on the Varanasi cable car system, which shows gondolas bearing a different livery from those seen in the false video (archived link).

    Uttar Pradesh police also dismissed the false claim in a post on its X account (archived link).

    AFP has previously debunked misinformation linked to Modi here.

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  • Driver in custody after deadly crash on Near West Side, police say

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — A driver is in custody after a man died in a West Side crash early Saturday morning, Chicago police said.

    Police said the crash happened in the Near West Side neighborhood’s 2600-block of West Warren Boulevard around 1:50 a.m.

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    A 42-year-old man driving a black Dodge SUV rear-ended a Grey Hyundai sedan, which was stopped at a traffic signal, police said.

    Police said the sedan’s driver, a 30-year-old man, suffered injuries throughout his body. He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    The SUV’s driver was taken into custody, and charges are pending, police said.

    CPD’s Major Accidents Unit is investigating.

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  • Pennsylvania State Police involved in crash on I-95 in Chester

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    It happened just before 2 a.m. on I-95 southbound just before the exit to 322 West to West Chester and Highland Avenue.

    Saturday, September 13, 2025 4:12PM

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    CHESTER, Pa. (WPVI) — Police are investigating a crash involving a Pennsylvania State Police vehicle in Chester, Delaware County.

    It happened just before 2 a.m. on I-95 southbound just before the exit to 322 West to West Chester and Highland Avenue.

    So far there is no word on any injuries.

    The road was shut down overnight but has since re-opened.

    This is an on-going investigation with Pennsylvania State Police.

    Copyright © 2025 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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  • Rudy Giuliani Seriously Injured In ‘High Speed’ Car Crash – Perez Hilton

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    Rudy Giuliani has been seriously injured in a bad car accident.

    On Sunday, the former New York City Mayor’s head of security Michael Ragusa revealed the shocking news in a lengthy statement on Instagram:

    “On the evening of August 30th, 2025, in New Hampshire, Mayor Giuliani was involved in a motor vehicle accident. Prior to the incident, he was flagged down by a woman who was the victim of a domestic violence incident. Mayor Giuliani immediately rendered assistance and contacted 911. He remained on scene until responding officers arrived to ensure her safety.”

    Related: Love Island USA’s Taylor Williams Hospitalized After Scary ‘Horse Accident’!

    Ragusa went on to reveal that Donald Trump’s former attorney suffered serious injuries to his spine and extremities shortly after:

    “Following this, while traveling on the highway, Mayor Giuliani’s vehicle was struck from behind at high speed. He was transported to a nearby trauma center, where he was diagnosed with a fractured thoracic vertebrae, multiple lacerations and contusions, as well as other injuries to his left arm and lower leg. His business partner and medical provider were promptly contacted and arrived at the hospital to oversee his care.”

    Yikes…

    The statement concluded:

    “At this time, no further updates are available. This is the only statement authorized by Mayor Giuliani.”

    See (below):

    The 81-year-old’s “medical provider” has since been identified as Maria Ryan, who told The New York Post on Sunday:

    “He’s getting further tests and stabilization of his injuries.”

    The controversial politician’s son Andrew told the outlet his father is “doing OK.”

    What are your reactions to this news, Perezcious readers? Let us know in the comments down below.

    [Image via MEGA/WENN]

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    Perez Hilton

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  • Death mix-up leaves Staten Island family in anguish on Halloween morning

    Death mix-up leaves Staten Island family in anguish on Halloween morning

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    ELTINGVILLE, Staten Island (WABC) — A family on Staten Island got the scare of their lives on Halloween, when police arrived at their door to deliver tragic news that a woman — a beloved sister and daughter — was killed after being hit by a car… except it wasn’t her.

    It was a case of mistaken identity that took 18 anguishing hours to correct.

    “My sister is a mental health person,” said Sheila Nagengast, the sister of Denise Owen.

    She got the door knock that everyone dreads.

    “They said, ‘I’m sorry to inform you but your sister has been killed fatally in a car accident,’” Nagengast said.

    Nagengast got the devastating news from NYPD detectives at 1:30 a.m. on the morning of Halloween.

    They informed her that her little sister, 44-year-old Denise Owen of New Dorp Beach, was hit by a car on Hylan Boulevard and thrown into the air, suffering fatal injuries.

    “They flew into the sky, landed on the pavement and their face was unrecognizable,” Nagengastsaid. “My question was: how did you identify my sister? They said that there was some sort of ID there, that they were able to identify her.”

    She was in shock for the next few hours, consenting to organ donation before rushing to the hospital morgue.

    Her sister suffered from schizophrenia, was at times homeless and in need of mental health help.

    Word spread fast with friends and family, sharing the news on Facebook, and sharing an article stated that Owen was walking against traffic when she was fatally struck by a Nissan Maxima, according to NYPD’s Highway District Collision Investigation Squad.

    “In 35 years of handling accident cases, I’ve never had this mix-up, I’ve never seen this mix-up,” said attorney John D’Agostino.

    Nagengast was meeting with D’Agostino, a local injury attorney, to file her sister’s wrongful death suit, when her phone rang.

    It was Nagengast’s other sister who said that she spotted Owen alive at the 7-Eleven near the intersection where police said she had been struck and killed.

    “She FaceTimed me, and my sister Denise, who was pronounced dead by NYPD, Staten Island Hospital North, the morgue who has all her information and everybody else… the newspapers, is standing directly in front of my sister… alive and well,” Nagengast said.

    “It takes us from a wrongful death action to a possible action for negligent infliction of emotional distress,” D’Agostino said.

    The NYPD apologized to Nagengast, and said they corrected the records and have taken her sister’s name off, and informed the correct family that it was their loved one who died.

    “Nobody should go through what I’ve been through in the last 24 hours… nobody,” Nagengast said.

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  • 2 dead in Aitkin County crash; 5 injured, including 3 children

    2 dead in Aitkin County crash; 5 injured, including 3 children

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    Digital Morning Headlines: Oct. 5, 2024


    Digital Morning Headlines: Oct. 5, 2024

    01:09

    AITKIN COUNTY, Minn. — Two people are dead and three juveniles and two other people are critically injured after a car crash on Highway 169.

    Four vehicles were involved in the crash: a Chevrolet Suburban pulling a trailer, a GMC Yukon, a Jeep and a Dodge Ram pulling a trailer. 

    According to an incident report, the Suburban was travelling eastbound pulling a trailer on County Road 3 when it failed to stop at the stop sign for Highway 169. Meanwhile, the Yukon was travelling north on Highway 169 when it struck the eastbound Suburban, causing severe damage. 

    The Jeep and the Dodge Ram, which was also pulling a trailer, were facing westbound and waiting when they were also struck by the Yukon, causing moderate damage.

    Two passengers in the Suburban, Elizabeth Baldwin, 61, and Marlo Baldwin, 92, died in the accident. The driver, Roger Walker, 61, suffered life-threatening injuries as a result of the accident. 

    Three of the passengers and the driver of the Yukon suffered life-threatening injuries. The three gravely injured passengers in are 18, 14 and 11 years old.

    This is a developing story. Check back on WCCO.com later for more details. 

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    WCCO Staff

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  • Elderly woman critical after being struck by car

    Elderly woman critical after being struck by car

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    NEXT Weather: 6 P.M. forecast for Saturday, September 28, 2024


    NEXT Weather: 6 P.M. forecast for Saturday, September 28, 2024

    02:10

    MINNEAPOLIS — A woman in her 70s was struck by a care just after 9 p.m. Saturday. 

    Police responded to a crash on Hennepin Avenue and 18th Avenue Southeast. When they arrived the found the woman with potentially life-threatening injuries. 

    She was taken to a nearby hospital. 

    Police say that a car was making a left turn onto Hennepin when the driver hit the woman. The driver is now cooperating with police who are investigating the incident. 

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  • 7 hospitalized after crash in West Englewood, officials say

    7 hospitalized after crash in West Englewood, officials say

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Seven people were hospitalized after a South Side crash on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Chicago police said the crash happened in the West Englewood neighborhood’s 5900-block of South Damen Avenue around 9:45 a.m.

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    A 52-year-old man was driving a gray-colored SUV eastbound when his vehicle collided with a black-colored SUV, driven by a 48-year-old man.

    The Chicago Fire Department said seven people were taken to local hospitals.

    Police said the 48-year-old driver was transported in stable condition to the University of Chicago Medical Center for unknown injuries.

    Five passengers were in the black-colored SUV.

    A 13-year-old girl, a 13-year-old boy and a 15-year-old girl suffered unknown injuries and were transported to Comer Children’s Hospital in stable condition, police said.

    Police said the two other passengers, an 88-year-old woman and a 77-year-old woman, were transported to the University of Chicago Medical Center for unknown injuries.

    Citations are pending. Police did not immediately provide further information about the crash.

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  • So Sad: Minnesota Vikings Rookie CB Khyree Jackson Dies After Triple-Car Accident In Maryland

    So Sad: Minnesota Vikings Rookie CB Khyree Jackson Dies After Triple-Car Accident In Maryland

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    Khyree Jackson – Source: Icon Sportswire / Getty

    Minnesota Vikings fourth-round draft pick & rookie cornerback Khyree Jackson died after a fatal car accident in Maryland.

    Tragedy has struck the football families of Alabama, Oregon, and the NFL’s Minnesota Vikings. Vikings rookie CB Khyree Jackson was killed over the weekend in a fatal car crash. According to Maryland State Police, the “triple fatal crash” claimed the lives of Isaiah Hazel, 23, of Upper Marlboro, Khyree Jackson, 24, of Waldorf and Anthony Lytton, Jr., 24, of Upper Marlboro. All three victims were in a Dodge Charger around 3:14 a.m. on July 6th when a silver Infiniti attempted to change lanes at a high rate of speed. However, the Infiniti reportedly struck the Charger and collided with a Chevrolet Impala. The accident occurred on Route 4/Pennsylvania Avenue in Prince George’s County.

    “I am absolutely crushed by this news. Khyree brought a contagious energy to our facility and our team. His confidence and engaging personality immediately drew his teammates to him,” Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell shared in a statement on social media.

    Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell took to social media to release a statement on Jackon’s passing. In the statement, he spoke to Khyree’s impact on the team in just a short time.

    “In our short time together, it was evident Khyree was going to develop into a tremendous professional football player, but what was more impressive was his desire to become the best person he could be for his family and those around him,” he added. “I am at a loss for words. My heart goes out to Khyree’s family, friends, teammates and coaches.”

    Prayers go out to his family and friends Khyree had so much life left and it was seemingly taken due to someone else’s carelessness. Everyone took to social media to share their stories about Khyree who seemed to leave an impact everywhere he went.

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  • Community mourns NYPD officer killed in Deer Park nail salon crash

    Community mourns NYPD officer killed in Deer Park nail salon crash

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    NEW HYDE PARK, Long Island (WABC) — It was an emotional day on Long Island as friends, family, and co-workers came together to remember an NYPD officer killed by an out-of-control car at a nail salon in Deer Park.

    A large sign was set up on the street with a picture of Officer Emilia Rennhack outside the home where her funeral was held Saturday in New Hyde Park.

    Rennhack was one of four people killed when an alleged drunk driver crashed into a nail salon in Deer Park last Friday.

    Pictured left to right: Jiancai Chen, Emilia Rennhack and Meizi Zhang

    Also killed in the crash were Jiancai ‘Kenny’ Chen, 37, of Bayside, Queens, Yan Xu, 41, of Flushing, Queens, and Meizi Zhang, 50, of Flushing, Queens.

    The 30-year-old was off-duty at the time, getting her nails done for a wedding.

    Officer Rennhack was assigned to the 102nd Precinct in Queens, where her husband is a detective.

    Police say Steven Schwally, 64, was drunk when he plowed an SUV through Hawaii Nail Salon.

    Schwally, of Dix Hills, has been charged with DWI, and additional charges could still be filed against him.

    This is not Schwally’s first DWI incident. He pleaded guilty to similar charges in Suffolk County in March 2013.

    Schwally was held on $1 million cash bail at his arraignment Monday afternoon in Central Islip.

    Prosecutors say he is a Marine Corps veteran who is living at a Motor Inn in Commack.

    He told police he had 18 beers the night before the crash, and stopped drinking at 4 a.m.

    Schwally is due back in court on July 12.

    ALSO READ | Family demands accountability for New York police killing of 13-year-old boy

    Family demands accountability for NY police killing of 13-year-old boy

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  • Deer Park, Long Island nail salon where 4 killed in DWI crash now site of growing memorial

    Deer Park, Long Island nail salon where 4 killed in DWI crash now site of growing memorial

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    DEER PARK, Long Island (WABC) — The Long Island nail salon where a suspected drunk driver plowed through the front glass, killing four people is now the site of a growing memorial.

    Among the victims – an off-duty NYPD officer and three members of the salon staff, who were all beloved by the community.

    Hawaii Nail and Spa in Deer Park was where customers used to go to feel beautiful.

    “Last Thursday Joy did my manicure and Jenny did my pedicure. She would always pick my colors,” said customer Patricia Castillo.

    It was where customers felt like family.

    Now, the spa is boarded up and is covered with all the markings of sorrow – candles, flowers and condolences.

    “They were gorgeous. I’ve been going here 15 years. I love them all, they are like family,” added Karen McClorey.

    On Friday afternoon, a speeding SUV crashed all the way through the store, killing three beloved staff members and off-duty NYPD offier Emilia Rennhack, 34.

    Rennhack was getting her nails done for a wedding that night. She was also married to a detective in the same 102 Precinct.

    Suffolk County Police believe the driver was so drunk he turned his vehicle into a weapon. Records show Steven Schwally, 64, has a prior DWI conviction.

    As the community turns to prayers for comfort, they are left with the bitter loss that such gentle souls are now gone.

    A candlelight vigil is planned for Monday night. Given the constant stream of mourners all weekend, the gathering is expected to be quite large and emotional.

    ALSO READ | Police searching for suspect after sunbathing woman sexually assaulted in Central Park

    Lindsay Tuchman has details on the manhunt of a suspect wanted for sexual assault in Central Park.

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    Lucy Yang

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  • Former sheriff paid for damaged guardrail, SUV using taxpayer-funded workers compensation settlement

    Former sheriff paid for damaged guardrail, SUV using taxpayer-funded workers compensation settlement

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    Former sheriff’s damaged county-owned SUV was paid for by settlement funds, documents say


    Former sheriff’s damaged county-owned SUV was paid for by settlement funds, documents say

    02:12

    MINNEAPOLIS — Hennepin County reached a settlement last year paying former Hennepin County Sheriff Dave Hutchinson $240,000. Hutchinson used some of that money to pay for a vehicle and guardrail he destroyed in 2021.

    Prosecutors say then-Sheriff David Hutchinson was drunk when he hit 126 miles-per-hour and rolled a county-owned car. The wrecked SUV cost $40,961.69. The guardrail cost $6,351.07.

    RELATED: Dave Hutchinson, former Hennepin County sheriff, fired by Metro Transit police after regaining job

    Newly released documents show that nearly $47,000 was deducted from his $240,000 taxpayer-funded workers’ compensation settlement, signed in November 2023.

    Current Hennepin County Sheriff Dawanna Witt and six other current and former employees filed a lawsuit last week alleging toxic workplace behavior including allegedly making “racist caricatures,” and leaving co-workers fearing “workplace violence.”

    MORE NEWS: Business impacts of Hennepin Avenue construction vary, depending on who you ask

    A spokesperson for Hennepin County pushed back on the lawsuit saying they worked hard to address concerns.

    A spokesperson also said the county took prompt action once they were alerted to these claims against the former sheriff. Hutchinson chose not to run for re-election and his term ended last year.

    Former Sheriff Hutchinson couldn’t be reached for comment.  

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    Ubah Ali

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  • Keeping Your Family Safe: Why It Matters Every Single Day  – Aha!NOW

    Keeping Your Family Safe: Why It Matters Every Single Day  – Aha!NOW

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    Staying safe on the road is not always in our hands, but what always does is calling the legal experts to ensure you get the right compensation. A car accident lawyer can help cover you with a safety net to remain safe even in adversities. ~ Ed.

    During the whirlwind of daily activities, it’s pretty easy to let thoughts of our family’s safety drift into the background. But let’s face facts – accidents can happen in just a snap, shaking up what started as a regular day. Making sure our loved ones are safe, both indoors and outdoors, is very important. It’s not just about caution; it’s about making a safe space where everyone feels secure, letting life flow without hitches.

    The National Safety Council (NSC) shares some pretty eye-opening numbers. In 2020, around 42,000 people lost their lives in car accidents across the U.S. On top of that, they say slips, trips, and falls are some of the top ways people get hurt at home. These numbers aren’t just shocking; they’re a clear call to action, showing us why we need to keep safety on our radar every day. 

    How to Keep Your Family Safe: A Two-Way Street

    First things first, making sure our homes are safe zones is key. What this means is regularly checking that everything’s as safe as can be. This includes making sure heavy furniture is secure and won’t tip over, testing smoke alarms every month to make sure they’re working, and keeping an eye out for anything around the house that could be dangerous. It might seem like small stuff, but it can make a big difference in preventing accidents. 

    When you’re out and about, especially on the roads in New York, staying sharp is crucial. The roads here can throw curveballs, and being a safe driver is more than just following road signs. It’s about being ready for anything. But even when you’re doing everything right, unexpected stuff can still happen. That’s when it’s super helpful to know who to call.

    If You’re in a Jam in Queens 

    Running into a car accident, especially in a bustling place like Queens, NY, can get complicated really fast. Getting in touch with a car accident lawyer in Queens is a major move to make sure your family gets through it okay. These folks know the ins and outs of what comes after an accident. They work hard so you can focus on what’s most important – helping your family recover and find peace. 

     Why Having a Lawyer in Queens Makes a Big Difference 

    Teaming up with Queens car accident lawyers who know all about car accidents can be a life saver. They’re not just any lawyer; they’re like your family’s champion. They stand up for you, making sure you’re treated right and get the compensation you deserve. If you’re dealing with insurance companies that want to pay out as little as possible or making sure all your medical bills are taken care of, having a skilled lawyer by your side can really streamline things.

    Wrapping Up

    In the end, keeping your family safe boils down to being prepped before anything happens, knowing how to dodge accidents, and having the right folks to call when you need a hand. It’s about weaving safety into the very fabric of our homes and daily routines.

    In lively, packed places like New York and Queens, knowing a solid car accident lawyer not only gives you legal backup; it wraps a safety net around your loved ones. With the right knowledge and people in your corner, families can step forward with an added layer of security, ready to face whatever challenges life tosses their way, keeping the journey ahead smooth and safeguarded from unexpected bumps.

    Over to you

    Have you or your loved ones ever met with a car accident? Did you or they take any legal help? Share your experiences and tips in the comments section.

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    Melissa Gonzalez

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  • Homeless in L.A.: Not every life is a ‘success story,’ but everyone deserves dignity

    Homeless in L.A.: Not every life is a ‘success story,’ but everyone deserves dignity

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    How many times have you heard successful people talking about the obstacles they overcame, the discouraging chapters they endured, the “rock bottom” from which they rose up? Maybe you see your own life in similar terms. It’s a particular narrative that ends with success, and anyone who has lived it would tend to think other people’s lives can, with work, conform to this arc. We need to get away from that assumption. Some people’s lives aren’t on an upward trajectory and may never be, and those people also deserve respect and dignity.

    Early this month I met with three of my unhoused neighbors in Venice, one who has been on and off the street for 20 years, one who has autism, and one whose life was upended by a toxic relationship. They agreed to share their stories with The Times on condition that their last names not be used.

    Governments and nonprofits pour untold sums into caring for the unhoused through myriad programs, but in speaking with unhoused people, I often hear that their needs are not very complex. Even a modest monthly check would be transformative to the lives of many. What if a big piece of the solution to homelessness were simply a universal basic income? — Robert Karron

    Brandon

    My name is Brandon, and I’m 37 years old. I grew up in Lancaster, in the Antelope Valley. I was 9½ weeks premature — only a bit over 3 pounds. I’ve made up for it since then. But my first year of life I had lots of seizures.

    “I didn’t understand why I had this unfulfilled feeling,” Brandon said of an early job he had. “My father had a face of fulfillment after a day’s work. Why didn’t I? I wanted to achieve that but didn’t know how.”

    (Courtesy of Robert Karron)

    I graduated from high school early, when I was 15. I did independent study, because school was becoming increasingly strange. There was violence and gang activity. Kids would get kicked out of L.A. County, then transfer to ours, in Kern County. I remember one kid shot and killed another in the eighth grade. They knew each other from L.A., and they had a beef from then. It happened in front of my math teacher’s house. For years, you could see the bullet holes in the wall. That kid was tried as an adult and got two life sentences. It’s like the school was a training camp for jail.

    It was also a racial political zone. I celebrate Hanukkah, and there was a group of kids that chose to call me names. I put myself out there, telling people I celebrated — I didn’t have to do that. But I didn’t realize it was going to be something that would be detrimental to my social well-being.

    So I took classes at home. It was good because I could go at my own pace, but it was bad because I got too familiar with my parents; we could have used more distance. I didn’t get along with my mom, and we clashed.

    After high school, I thought I’d go to the Marines — my grandfather was a decorated war hero — and they accepted me into the deferred entry program, but they found marijuana in my drug test, so that didn’t work out. I was exposed to drugs early; it was rampant at my high school. You were pressured to take them because the kids who were selling were depending on it for their livelihood; in their families, they were the earners. It seemed glamorous then, but I don’t see any glamour in it now.

    I just use these blankets. It’s not enough, but people steal so frequently, it’s hard to keep stuff.

    — Brandon

    I started working for an insurance company, and I stayed for seven years. I was also taking college classes at Antelope Valley College, music classes, my passion. I didn’t think of music practice as “practice,” because when you’re getting so much pleasure out of something, “practice” isn’t in your mind-set. But when the money started coming in, I let all that slide.

    I had lots of jobs within the company, but mainly I was a patient service associate. By the time I was 17, I had my own apartment; my parents helped me furnish it, super sweet of them, but I wasn’t ready for that kind of responsibility. Even though I was making money, it was a miserable existence. It was a dark period for me. I kept feeling empty at the end of each day. I didn’t understand why I had this unfulfilled feeling. My father had a face of fulfillment after a day’s work. Why didn’t I? I wanted to achieve that but didn’t know how.

    At 18, I fell in love with a woman who was 22 years older than me. I was with her for seven years. She was an amazing artist. Eventually I quit my job and worked as a butler for her friends. When I left her, I sought therapy, because I’d lost my grip on society. I tried to get into music then, but there weren’t many opportunities.

    I’ve been on and off the streets for 20 years. I just use these blankets. It’s not enough, but people steal so frequently, it’s hard to keep stuff. I’d like to get my own space, but I’m not sure how. I’m putting one foot in front of the other. It’s hard because I have a stomach bug and all these wounds on my leg and hand that never heal. They’re in a constant state of infection.

    Garrick

    My name is Garrick, and I’m 56 years old. I’ve been in L.A. for nine months. Before that I was in New York City for 11 years (128 months). I’m scheduled to move again 39 days from now, on Tuesday, Feb. 20, and I need to find a place where I can spend the day before — from 8 in the morning till 8 at night — getting cleaned up. I don’t know where that will happen. Do you have any ideas? Is there a gymnasium in L.A. that has army cots and a big bathroom with showers and sinks and commodes where you can go and leave anytime you want as long as you sign your name? I’m asking because I’ve never heard of such a thing.

    A bearded man in a sweater standing outside

    “What I’d like for after my bus trip is a CD player,” Garrick said of his plan to move to Boston. “Then I need a CD with every song Led Zeppelin ever sang.”

    (Courtesy of Robert Karron)

    I’m moving to Boston, but I need someone’s smart device to check Greyhound for the bus that makes stops in Phoenix, El Paso, Dallas, Atlanta, Washington, D.C., and three stops in South Carolina: Anderson, Greenville and Spartanburg. Then I need to see what time the bus arrives in Boston. If I know the time, I can plan out my first day.

    I’m moving because Boston has everything I need. In L.A. I’m laying on the sidewalk with chiggers. It’s better than New York by a long margin, but in Boston I’ll have better prospects because I know the neighborhoods and resources and trains and shopping centers. I lived there for four months, before moving to New York. In between, I was in Providence, for two days and two nights.

    There are a lot of variables when you come from a broken home, and you have high-functioning autism, and your stepfather was drafted in the Vietnam War and was an authoritarian figure who moved you and your mother to Ohio.

    My mother and I identify with each other and idolize each other. We could always work things out, if it was just the two of us. But that went down the toilet when my mother let people deter things between us, when they talked a line to her. When she was manipulated, things went in different directions.

    Jobs? If you have high-functioning autism, you can’t hold a job.

    — Garrick

    I like heavy music, specifically the songs from the summer and fall of 1972 and the winter, spring, summer and fall of 1973. The utmost prime example of that is music by Led Zeppelin — by a long margin, my favorite singing group. What I’d like for after my bus trip is a CD player without earphones (those always make the player fall apart) that operates on batteries. I can pay for the batteries. Then I need a CD with every song Led Zeppelin ever sang.

    Jobs? If you have high-functioning autism, you can’t hold a job.

    I have three main sleeping spots. One of them is here. Last night it dipped down to 46 and 47 degrees. To keep warm I use linens I stash behind those bushes.

    Cynthia

    My name is Cynthia, and I’m 59 years old. I was born in Ohio but raised in Wisconsin. I completed junior high, but at 15 I quit school because I got pregnant. The father was a family friend in his 20s who my mother had asked to watch us when she took classes to become a certified nursing assistant. He ended things when he found out I was pregnant.

    A woman in a purple jacket with a tent in the background

    “I took the bus to Union Station in Pasadena, where they help you find a place,” Cynthia said. “But soon I was on the streets.”

    (Courtesy of Robert Karron)

    By 17 I was having problems with depression, and the state took my daughter away. It’d be illegal now: They threatened to cut off my mother’s welfare checks if I didn’t sign the papers. I got pregnant again at 21 and have a son who loves me to death; he’s in Kentucky now with his dad, my ex-fiance. We were going to get married, but he wanted me to live in his mother’s house for a year; I said no and moved back in with my mom. He came to get the engagement rings. That made me mad, so I threw them into the front yard. He searched for two hours but eventually found them.

    I went back to school and got my GED. I was taking college business courses, but the man I was married to then couldn’t hold a job, so I quit and started working at a company that sent out cheese and candy packages.

    Later I was engaged to someone who moved me to Minneapolis, where I worked at a Greek restaurant. When I found him in bed with another man, I had to find another place to stay. The owner of the restaurant, who liked me, was going to put me up, but his wife got jealous. So I had to move back home again.

    I met my boyfriend Greg. We got to talking, and by nighttime he was cuddled up next to me.

    — Cynthia

    When I was living at home, I began a 10-year relationship with someone I saw a few times a year. He said he was in the armed services and was always traveling. After 10 years I was 53, and he asked me to move in with him in Los Angeles. I’m two hours on the bus when I call him. He says he’s in trouble and needs $500. I say I don’t have it. He says, get it any way you can. When I couldn’t get it, he stopped taking my calls. I took the bus to Union Station in Pasadena, where they help you find a place — but soon I was on the streets.

    I was protected by this great guy called Tennessee (he was from Tennessee), and two weeks later, I met my boyfriend, Greg. We got to talking, and by nighttime he was cuddled up next to me. Tennessee gave him a blanket, but at midnight I told him to leave — it was going too fast. But it all worked out. We’ve been together 5½ years, and we’re going to get married after we move in together.

    Robert Karron teaches English at Santa Monica College.

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    Robert Karron

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  • Deadly pileup blamed on fog, wildfire smoke

    Deadly pileup blamed on fog, wildfire smoke

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    Deadly pileup blamed on fog, wildfire smoke – CBS News


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    At least two people were killed in a pileup near New Orleans involving around 100 vehicles. Officials say the crashes were likely caused by a combination of dense fog and wildfire smoke that severely limited drivers’ visibility. Omar Villafranca reports.

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