A person is dead and part of Interstate 85 in Butner is shut down Tuesday after a vehicle hit someone in the road and drove away from the scene, according to State Highway Patrol.
A state trooper on the scene told WRAL News that authorities are searching for the driver who hit and killed a person on I-85 North near N.C. 56 in Butner around 2 a.m.
Traffic was being diverted off I-85 North at Exit 191. Drivers can get back on I-85 at the next entrance. The interstate is expected to reopen around 6 a.m.
The trooper said the investigation spanned two counties — Granville and Vance — with an investigation into a vehicle found near Henderson, about 20 miles from the original crash.
WRAL News is working to find out if the driver has been found, the identity of the person who was killed and if the driver is facing any charges.
Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news. Support my work with a digital subscription
THERE’S SOME BREAKING NEWS JUST INTO OUR NEWSROOM RIGHT NOW. ELK GROVE POLICE ARE SEARCHING FOR A DRIVER WHO HIT AND KILLED A PERSON, THEN DROVE OFF. IT HAPPENED JUST AFTER EIGHT TONIGHT ON BRUCEVILLE ROAD BETWEEN DELUSO DRIVE AND LAGUNA BOULEVARD. SOUTHBOUND BRUCEVILLE IS CLOSED AT DELUSO. INVESTIGATORS ARE SEARCHING FOR THE SUSPECTS VEHICLE, WHICH IS DESCRIBED AS A DARK COLORED SUV. WE’LL HAV
25-year-old pedestrian dies after a hit-and-run in Elk Grove, police say
A hit-and-run left a 25-year-old woman dead after the pedestrian was struck while crossing the street on Bruceville Road in Elk Grove, police said. Just before 8 p.m., the pedestrian was crossing the middle of the street when she was hit hit by a vehicle that was traveling southbound on Bruceville Road, police said.The woman died at the scene, and investigators are actively looking for the suspect’s vehicle.Officials describe the vehicle as a dark colored SUV.Southbound Bruceville Road from Di Lusso Drive to Laguna Boulevard was closed during the investigation, officials said.Anyone with information is urged to call traffic detectives at 916-478-8153. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
ELK GROVE, Calif. —
A hit-and-run left a 25-year-old woman dead after the pedestrian was struck while crossing the street on Bruceville Road in Elk Grove, police said.
Just before 8 p.m., the pedestrian was crossing the middle of the street when she was hit hit by a vehicle that was traveling southbound on Bruceville Road, police said.
The woman died at the scene, and investigators are actively looking for the suspect’s vehicle.
Officials describe the vehicle as a dark colored SUV.
Southbound Bruceville Road from Di Lusso Drive to Laguna Boulevard was closed during the investigation, officials said.
Anyone with information is urged to call traffic detectives at 916-478-8153.
A San Diego Police cruiser. (File photo by Chris Stone/Times of San Diego)
A pedestrian suffered serious injuries when he was struck by a motorcyclist in the Pacific Beach community of San Diego, authorities said Saturday.
The crash occurred about 9:20 p.m. Friday in the 1900 block of Garnet Avenue, the San Diego Police Department reported.
A 35-year-old man was walking southbound on the east crosswalk — against the red “Don’t Walk” signal — when he was struck by a 21-year-old man riding a Suzuki 1500 motorcycle eastbound in the 1900 block of Garnet Avenue.
The 35-year-old man suffered a lacerated liver, a fractured femur and several other fractures. The biker sustained multiple abrasions. Paramedics rushed the 35-year-old man to a hospital. It was not known whether the motorcyclist was sent to a hospital.
DUI was not suspected and there was no other immediate information available.
Anyone with any information regarding the crash was urged to call Crime Stoppers at 888-580-8477.
MEAD, Colo. — A 26-year-old pedestrian was killed after she was struck by a passing car on Interstate 25 near Mead, according to the Colorado State Patrol.
The incident occurred around 5:34 a.m. Saturday, in the northbound lanes, and involved a Honda Accord.
Troopers said the driver of the Honda remained at the scene following the incident.
The 26-year-old woman was pronounced deceased at the scene, according to the CSP.
Her name was withheld pending next of kin notification.
The crash and investigation closed northbound I-25 for several hours.
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A person was hit by a car on Friday in Southern Pines.
According to the Southern Pines Police Department, the accident happened around U.S. Highway 1 and Council Way. Police said they found a pedestrian with serious injuries when they arrived, and the driver remained on the scene.
Police said the victim was airlifted to the hospital and has serious injuries, adding that their investigation is ongoing.
Shanta Norton is pushing to support safety in her community and other rural areas after the death of her younger sister Shannon Rush earlier this week. She’s dubbed the petition “Shannon’s Law,” which has already gained 2,000 signatures in a matter of days. Rush was a senior at Forest High School and her family said she wanted to someday become a school teacher. On Monday, around 6:20 in the morning, while walking to the bus stop on Blitchton Road, Rush was hit by an SUV. “She was just a bright, goofy person and made us laugh constantly,” she said. “She was a light to our family.”Now, Norton is pushing to have sidewalks, adequate street lighting and signage along the roadway where her sister died and neighboring streets.”I just want something to happen that you can see along the roadway in different parts of the town, not just this neighborhood. The street lights are very dim, and it’s very dark walking in these places,” said Norton.The SUV driver claimed Rush was walking in the roadway and not on the grassy part of the road when they collided. Family members no longer believe Rushing was wearing headphones during the accident. Norton is also concerned about speeding on that stretch of road. “Since this happened, I’ve been standing in my driveway every morning at 6 a.m. Trailers and SUVs are doing at least 50, 60 (mph) coming off of 10th street,” said Norton. Norton knows the changes she’s pushing for won’t bring her sister back, but she hopes it will do something to improve safety in her community and prevent others from enduring the same pain. Click here to learn more about the petition for Shannon’s Law.
MARION COUNTY, Fla. —
Shanta Norton is pushing to support safety in her community and other rural areas after the death of her younger sister Shannon Rush earlier this week. She’s dubbed the petition “Shannon’s Law,” which has already gained 2,000 signatures in a matter of days.
Rush was a senior at Forest High School and her family said she wanted to someday become a school teacher.
On Monday, around 6:20 in the morning, while walking to the bus stop on Blitchton Road, Rush was hit by an SUV.
“She was just a bright, goofy person and made us laugh constantly,” she said. “She was a light to our family.”
Now, Norton is pushing to have sidewalks, adequate street lighting and signage along the roadway where her sister died and neighboring streets.
“I just want something to happen that you can see along the roadway in different parts of the town, not just this neighborhood. The street lights are very dim, and it’s very dark walking in these places,” said Norton.
The SUV driver claimed Rush was walking in the roadway and not on the grassy part of the road when they collided.
Family members no longer believe Rushing was wearing headphones during the accident.
Norton is also concerned about speeding on that stretch of road.
“Since this happened, I’ve been standing in my driveway every morning at 6 a.m. Trailers and SUVs are doing at least 50, 60 (mph) coming off of 10th street,” said Norton.
Norton knows the changes she’s pushing for won’t bring her sister back, but she hopes it will do something to improve safety in her community and prevent others from enduring the same pain.
Click here to learn more about the petition for Shannon’s Law.
Pedestrian dead after crash in midtown Sacramento, police say
MAILED OUT BEFORE THAT WAS CAUGHT. A NEW MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR PROJECT IN WEST SACRAMENTO IS PART OF THE CITY’S OVERALL DEVELOPMENT FOR GROWTH, EXPECTED TO COME IN THE NEXT FEW YEARS. THANKS FOR BEING WITH US AT SIX. I’M GULSTAN DART AND I’M EDIE LAMBERT. THIS IS NOT PART OF THE PROJECTS NEAR SUTTER HEALTH PARK. HERITAGE OAKS PARK IS IN SOUTHPORT AT LAKE WASHINGTON BOULEVARD AND VILLAGE PARKWAY. KCRA 3’S MICHELLE BANDUR SHOWS US HOW ONE RESTAURANT IS ALREADY SERVING CUSTOMERS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE PROJECT. EMILE’S CAFE SERVING UP LATTES FOR LUNCH, NOT WAITING FOR THE WORK OUTSIDE TO BE DONE. IT WAS JUST SITTING HERE VACANT AND WAS JUST KIND OF INSPIRING TO THINK ABOUT WHAT IT COULD BE, CO-OWNER JOSH THURSTON TAKING A CHANCE TO OPEN WHILE BULLDOZERS MOVED DIRT AND BUILD WEST. SACRAMENTO’S LATEST $7 MILLION PROJECT, EVEN ON A RAINY DAY. DO YOU HAVE THE. YOU CAN SEE THE VISION OF WHAT’S TO COME HERE? YEAH. THAT’S RIGHT, YOU CAN. WEST SACRAMENTO MAYOR MARTHA GUERRERO SAYS THIS IS A LONG AWAITED PROJECT. THE CITY BOUGHT HERITAGE OAKS PARK NINE YEARS AGO, AND NOW THEIR PLANS FOR A COMMUNITY DESTINATION COMING INTO PLAY AS THE AREA KEEPS GROWING, WE ARE GOING TO HAVE A LOT OF HOUSING AND GROWTH IN IN THE SOUTHERN PART OF THE TOWN. IT’S BEEN PLANNED FOR OVER A DECADE AND SO WE WILL HAVE ABOUT 6000 HOMES THAT ARE GOING TO BE DEVELOPING IN THIS AREA, ESPECIALLY RIGHT ACROSS THE STREET. THE NINE ACRES INCLUDES AN OUTDOOR AMPHITHEATER, SPLASH PAD, BMX BIKE SKILLS COURSE AND SKATE PARK. ADA ADAPTABLE PLAYGROUND, FITNESS STATIONS, WALKING TRAILS ALL WHILE WORKING AROUND 160 TREES AND THE NATIVE AMERICAN HISTORY. WE’VE WORKED WITH OUR OUR INDIGENOUS COMMUNITY IS THAT WE WANTED TO PRESERVE THE HERITAGE OF THIS PART OF OUR CITY WHERE THE NATIVE AMERICAN COMMUNITY HAD ESTABLISHED THEMSELVES UP ALONG THE RIVERFRONT. SO THEN HE WROTE, FATHER PAUL BABA IS ALREADY AN AMY LU REGULAR. IN A FEW SHORT MONTHS, ENJOYING THE PEACEFUL ATMOSPHERE. IT’S TIME TO BREAK THE GROUND AND PUT IN SOME NICE THINGS AND RESTAURANTS. AND LIKE THIS CAFE, MEALS AND OF COURSE PLACES TO WALK AND TO EXERCISE AND TO HAVE PEACE. EMIL’S WANTS TO BE THE ANCHOR FOR THE COMMUNITY. WE THINK THIS NEIGHBORHOOD AND THIS COMMUNITY NEEDS A SORT OF A GROUNDING CENTER. EMIL’S ACTUALLY OPENED ITS DOORS A FULL YEAR BEFORE THIS PROJECT IS EXPECTED TO BE COMPLETED IN THE SUMMER OF 2026. REPORTING IN WEST SACRAMENTO, MICHELLE BANDUR KCRA THREE NEWS. AND $3 MILLION OF THAT PROJECT CAME FROM A FEDERAL GRANT. CHECKING BACK IN WITH OUR WEATHER RIGHT NOW, A LIVE LOOK ACROSS OUR AREA, WE’VE GOT RANCHO CORDOVA WEST SACRAMENTO, A SHOT FROM PINE HILL. AND YEAH, WE HAD A RAINY MORNING AND WE HAVE A CHANCE FOR MORE WET WEATHER TOMORROW. SO LET’S CHECK IN WITH OUR METEOROLOGIST DIRK VERDOORN. YEAH, WE’VE SEEN A SHIFT IN THE RAIN. WE HAD A PRETTY GOOD SOAKING RAIN THIS MORNING. AND THAT RAIN HAS STAYED PRETTY STEADY THROUGH THE MOUNTAINS WHILE THE VALLEYS DRIED OUT. NICE LOOK HERE FROM OUR RANCHO CORDOVA SKY CAMERA. SO LET’S LOOK AT JUST SOME UPDATED NUMBERS. FIRST WE HAD A HAD AN UPDATE FROM THE 3:00 HOUR. THE 5:00 HOUR. WE GOT SOME BIGGER NUMBERS HERE. BLUE CANYON GOT OVER TWO INCHES OF RAIN AND THEY’RE STILL ADDING TO THOSE NUMBERS. AUBURN 7300 POLLOCK PINES ALSO NOW AT 1.36IN OVER AN INCH AND A THIRD. THEY’RE QUINCY, 55/100 OF AN INCH AND 20/900 IN SACRAMENTO. GOT OVER A QUARTER OF AN INCH IN SACRAMENTO. AND THIS WAS REALLY THE CORRIDOR WHERE WE SAW THE MAIN STREAM JUST CONTINUE TO FLOW THROUGH THE MORNING, DROPPING THOSE IMPRESSIVE AMOUNTS. NOW IT’S SHIFTED A LITTLE BIT MORE TO THE EAST. WE’RE STILL GETTING SOME RAIN OVER LAKE TAHOE, BUT YOU CAN SEE THE HEAVIEST RAIN A LITTLE BIT SOUTH OF LAKE TAHOE THROUGH TUOLUMNE COUNTY, MARIPOSA COUNTY AND COUNTIES THAT ARE FARTHER SOUTH THAN THAT. WHAT CAN WE EXPECT AS WE GO THROUGH THE NIGHT? TONIGHT? WE WILL SEE SOME CLEARING RIGHT NOW, BUT THEN THE CLOUDS WILL START COMING BACK AS WE GET CLOSER TO MIDNIGHT. AND THEN IN THE EARLY MORNING HOURS, THAT LOOKS LIKE IT’S GOING TO BE OUR BEST CHANCE FOR SOME MORE RAIN THAT’S GOING TO BE MOVING IN. IT’S NOT GOING TO BE A LOT, BUT THE CHANCE FOR RAIN COULD BE THERE FOR THE MORNING COMMUTE. WE’LL HAVE MORE ON THAT COMING UP. NOW BACK OVER TO YOU. DEREK. THANK YOU. THE CHP SAYS THE WET WEATHER CONTRIBUTED TO A DEADLY CRASH ON I-80. THE CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY PATROL GOT REPORTS OF THAT CRASH JUST AFTER NOON TODAY. THIS WAS AT THE HIGHWAY 174 OFFRAMP NEAR COLFAX. OFFICERS SAY THAT CAR SPUN OUT AND SPEED COMBINED WITH THE WET ASPHALT MAY HAVE BEEN FACTORS. OFFICERS SAY A YOUNG PERSON WAS KILLED AND THREE OTHERS WERE SERIOUSLY HURT. NO OTHER CARS WERE INVOLVED. THE NAME AND AGE OF THE PERSON KILLED HAVE NOT BEEN RELEASED. THE MAN ACCUSED OF SHOOTING INTO THE LOBBY OF A SACRAMENTO TV STATION HAS BEEN INDICTED ON FEDERAL CHARGES. 64 YEAR OLD. ANIBAL HERNANDEZ SANTANA IS ACCUSED OF SHOOTING AT THE LOCAL ABC AFFILIATE. LAST MONTH, A GRAND JURY HANDED UP THE INDICTMENT ON FEDERAL CHARGES OF POSSESSION OF A FIREARM AND FIRING A GUN IN A SCHOOL ZONE AND INTERFERING WITH THE RADIO COMMUNICATIONS STATION. HERNANDEZ SANTANA IS SCHEDULED TO BE BACK IN COURT NEXT MONDAY. THE MAN ACCUSED OF KILLING A STOCKTON WOMAN AND HIDING HER BODY IN AN ATTIC FACED A JUDGE FOR THE FIRST TIME TODAY. 41 YEAR-OLD DOUGLAS SHAW WAS ARRESTED ON TUESDAY AT SIX FLAGS DISCOVERY KINGDOM, WHERE HE WORKED. HE IS ACCUSED OF KILLING 28 YEAR-OLD LEWIS. HER FAMILY TRACKED HER PHONE TO A HOME IN VALLEJO AFTER THEY STOPPED HEARING FROM HER, AND THAT’S WHERE POLICE FOUND HER BODY. DOZENS OF HER FAMILY MEMBERS FILLED THE COURTROOM TODAY TO CALL FOR JUSTICE. AT THIS POINT, OUR FAMILY IS UNDER GRIEVANCE. WE ARE JUST WE ARE DEVASTATED AT THIS TIME AND WE JUST ASK THE PUBLIC. WE ASK EVERY PERSON TO PLEASE KEEP OUR FAMILY IN PRAYER. SHAW IS BEING HEL
Pedestrian dead after crash in midtown Sacramento, police say
A woman is dead after being hit by a vehicle Thursday evening in midtown Sacramento. According to the Sacramento Police Department, the crash happened around 6:30 p.m. along 29th Street. Officials say the woman was taken to a nearby hospital with serious injuries, where she later died.Police have closed 29th Street at K Street and travelers are advised to take alternate routes. This is a developing story and will be updated as we learn more information. See our live traffic map for updates.Click the video player above to watch other evening headlines from KCRA News 3This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.See more coverage of top California stories here | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
A woman is dead after being hit by a vehicle Thursday evening in midtown Sacramento.
According to the Sacramento Police Department, the crash happened around 6:30 p.m. along 29th Street.
Officials say the woman was taken to a nearby hospital with serious injuries, where she later died.
Police have closed 29th Street at K Street and travelers are advised to take alternate routes. This is a developing story and will be updated as we learn more information.
Click the video player above to watch other evening headlines from KCRA News 3
This story was curated by Hearst’s KCRA Alert Desk.
See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.
If this story happened near you or someone you know, share this article with friends in your area using the KCRA mobile app so they know what is happening near them. The KCRA app is available for free in Apple’s App Store and on Google Play.
DENVER — Police in Denver are investigating a hit-and-run crash that claimed the life of a pedestrian in the city’s Lincoln Park neighborhood early Saturday morning.
The incident occurred near the intersection of W. 14th Avenue and Lipan Street.
Police initially believed this incident to be a shooting.
However, a further investigation revealed the victim was fatally struck by a vehicle, which then took off after the crash.
A description of the suspect vehicle was not available.
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SAN JOSE – A woman died Tuesday of injuries she suffered last week in San Jose when she was hit by a man suspected of riding a bicycle under the influence of a controlled substance, police said.
The crash happened around 7:15 p.m. on Aug. 27 in the area of Ocala Avenue and Berona Way, near Hillview Park, according to San Jose police Sgt. Jorge Garibay.
Garibay said a man was riding a 16-speed Centurion bicycle westbound on Ocala Avenue in the bicycle lane when he hit a woman walking or jogging in the same direction and lane.
The woman was taken to an area hospital with life-threatening injuries and later stabilized, according to Garibay.
The man stopped at the scene. Garibay said he was arrested and booked into Santa Clara County jail on charges of DUI on a bicycle causing injury and being under the influence of a controlled substance. He was not publicly identified Wednesday.
On Wednesday, police received word the woman had died a day earlier of her injuries, according to Garibay. The Santa Clara County Medical Examiner-Coroner’s Office will release her identity after it is confirmed and her next of kin is notified.
The death marked the 23rd traffic fatality of 2025 on city streets. Police had investigated 35 roadway deaths at this time last year.
Anyone with information related to the case can contact Detective White of the SJPD Traffic Investigations Unit at 4638@sanjoseca.gov or 408-277-4654. Tips can also be left with Silicon Valley Crime Stoppers at 408-947-7867 or at siliconvalleycrimestoppers.org.
SALEM —The city’s local historic preservation organization is raising concerns regarding recently installed bollards in front of the Ropes Mansion at 318 Essex St.
Historic Salem Inc. claims the bollards are visually jarring and out of character with the historic setting both in scale and placement.
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Denver’s fast-moving, multi-lane Speer Boulevard is not the city’s most pedestrian-friendly street.
But what if it was?
The road, parts of which are among the city’s most dangerous corridors, could be radically changed if the city follows through on a new study that recommends an overhaul of Speer Boulevard between Colfax Avenue and Interstate 25 as it moves along the Auraria Campus, River Mile and Ball Arena area and much of Lower Downtown.
The study’s authors — a group of architecture firms commissioned by the city — suggest reformatting 1.5 miles of Speer Boulevard. Right now, the boulevard includes a pair of busy one-way streets, one on each side of Cherry Creek. This new “vision” would reduce it to a single road, with two lanes in each direction, occupying just a single side of the creek.
A rendering of the current layout of Speer Boulevard.Courtesy of the Denver Department of Transportation and Infrastructure
A rendering of the proposed changes to Speer Boulevard.Courtesy of the Denver Department of Transportation and Infrastructure
This change would be a massive overhaul to one of the busiest streets running through the heart of downtown. With Speer relocated to only one side of the creek, the entire other side could be freed up and turned into a landscaped series of public parks and recreational space.
The study also imagines the eventual addition of bus rapid transit — known as BRT — along Speer Boulevard, which could include a series of dedicated bus lanes and upgraded bus stops for faster public transit along the corridor.
(Elsewhere, the city will break ground on Denver’s first BRT line, which will run along East Colfax Avenue, this fall.)
The new Speer vision could turn what is essentially a highway through the heart of downtown into a pedestrian and transit paradise.
Making the change, however, would require hundreds of millions of dollars, years of planning and a significant change to how people navigate the corridor. Right now, it’s just a 54-page report and a grand vision. And there’s a long history of grand visions for Speer. Here’s what it might take to make this one happen.
The study imagines a future Denver with better public transit and fewer cars.
The new vision for Speer Boulevard comes as the city is reimagining much of downtown. Developers plan to transform 55 acres of parking lots around Ball Arena into housing, hotels, office space and entertainment venues.
That means the area around Speer Boulevard could see a massive transformation in the next few years.
A rendering of the proposed changes to Speer Boulevard.Courtesy of the Denver Department of Transportation and Infrastructure
“Historically, Speer has been used by drivers and vehicles moving in and out of the city, often bypassing downtown,” the study’s authors wrote, adding that planned redevelopments would “reposition Speer from an arterial at the city’s edge to a street within the city’s center.”
Jill Locantore, executive director of the Denver Streets Partnership, has advocated for pedestrian upgrades to busy city streets for years. She wants Speer to be a part of the downtown transformation in the coming years.
“It’s designed like a highway when what it needs to be is a people-friendly Main Street,” she said.
In Denver, Speer pushed for the creation of new parks and parkways. One of his most consequential road projects was the redesign of what was then Cherry Creek Drive, which at the time was lined with shanties and industrial ruins, into what is now Speer Boulevard.
Famed city planner and landscape architect George Kessler and Denver’s own landscape architect S.R. DeBoer upgraded much of the road to a tree-lined drive with new parks, lampposts, and other amenities that enhanced the pedestrian experience, according to The Cultural Landscape Foundation. The creek was walled to keep it from flooding.
It was “the heart’s desire of the mayor that his name shall be perpetuated,” the Rocky Mountain News reported in 1908, so the city’s board of supervisors “railroaded through” a resolution renaming the road to Speer Boulevard in his honor.
This 1916 photo shows a much smaller and quieter Speer Boulevard, at right, where it intersects with E 7th Avenue. Courtesy Denver Public Library Special Collections, X-22674
“This would also be a good street to try enforcing [minimum speed limits],” one approving Rocky columnist wrote in 1958. “After all, one slow poke can hold up a whole line of cars.”
One out-there idea from the late 1960s would have added transit without infringing on car space. Noted railroad artist Otto Kuhler proposed an elevated monorail loop around Denver that would’ve straddled the creek.
That, of course, was never built.
Denver is about to re-pedestrianize and cut car space on other key roadways.
With the Colfax Avenue Bus Rapid Transit project breaking ground in October, the city is going all in on bus transit along that corridor. The nearly $300 million project, funded with a mix of federal and local money, will drop the infamous car-centric street down to just one lane in each direction between downtown and Aurora.
Plus, earlier this year, City Council rezoned large parts of that stretch to promote pedestrian-facing businesses over drive-thrus in anticipation of the BRT. Denver and state transportation officials are also studying a potential BRT along Federal Boulevard, one of the city’s most deadly streets.
In June, city officials also broke ground on a $15.5 million pedestrian improvement project along West Colfax that will add medians, signal crosswalks and landscaping along portions of the road.
Denver City Council is also thinking about how to better use Denver’s downtown waterways. A new Council committee started in July is thinking about how to make the South Platte River, which intersects with Cherry Creek and Speer, more accessible and better integrated into the city.
Reshaping Speer could be easier said than done.
The Speer plan acknowledges that a traditional traffic study might conclude that eliminating half of Speer’s traffic lanes wouldn’t be feasible because it could cause traffic gridlock.
But the study’s authors say a metamorphosis of the corridor is indeed possible — if 40 to 50 percent of the more than 5,000 drivers per hour that use Speer at peak times can be convinced to switch to transit, bicycle, or some other form of transportation.
Any bus service along this stretch would be starting from scratch, though. Unlike on Colfax, which holds the busiest RTD bus lines in its system, there is no local bus service along Speer north of Broadway. RTD cut its services significantly during the pandemic and has limited plans to restore them.
Still, Locantore, who helped advocate for projects like the West Colfax upgrades, has pushed for city and state leaders to extend their BRT plans to include this stretch of Speer. She believes a transformed Speer could happen.
“That’s exactly the kind of change that we need, but we’ll see how bold the city is willing to be in reimagining this particular corridor,” she said. “It would take community support, political will and funding.”
The study’s authors estimate their proposal would cost nearly $600 million to build — about double the cost of the Colfax bus project. That money isn’t in the budget just yet, and the city hasn’t announced its next steps.
What do you want the future of Speer Boulevard to look like? Drop us a line at [email protected].
A pedestrian was fatally struck early Monday by a Metrolink commuter train in Northridge, according to officials.
The person was hit in a “non-pedestrian area” on the tracks just before 5:30 a.m., according to Scott Johnson, a spokesperson for Metrolink. No one else was injured, but the southbound train on the Ventura County line was halted and removed from service.
The 60 passengers on board were assisted off and provided alternative transportation through ride-sharing apps, Johnson said.
The Los Angeles Police Department is investigating the incident, which occurred on the tracks near Corbin Avenue and Bahama Street, according to Officer Norma Eisenman, an LAPD spokesperson. The person who was killed had not yet been publicly identified.
“The tracks are still closed as officials respond,” Johnson said. That section of the railway between Chatsworth and Northridge remains closed, causing delays to Metrolink’s Ventura County line and the Pacific Surfliner, he said. Rail service will resume once the LAPD and the coroner’s office clear the scene.
“We want to remind everyone in the community to stay off the tracks,” Johnson said.
Groundbreaking on new pedestrian safety improvements at West Colfax Avenue and Winona Court. June 6, 2024.
Rebecca Tauber/Denverite
West Colfax is getting a slew of transportation safety improvements as part of a $15.5 million infrastructure project after years of community organizing.
The city broke ground on the project Thursday and is expected to finish in the summer of 2025.
The project will add medians and signal crosswalks for pedestrians at intersections along Colfax Avenue between Irving Street and Sheridan Boulevard. The medians will prevent left-hand turns at non-signal intersections, adding another level of pedestrian safety.
The corridor will also get sidewalk build-outs for RTD buses, making it easier for buses to pick up passengers more quickly.
West Colfax Avenue at Irving Street, July 12, 2023.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
The plan also includes greenery across the new medians along Colfax Avenue to combat heat islands and improve West Colfax’s tree canopy.
The greenery almost didn’t happen after inflation raised the cost of the project. At first, the landscaping was cut, but a mix of city and bond funding brought it back.
“It’s on Colfax where people from all different backgrounds come together to go to school or the library, to drink a toast at a dive bar, to eat tacos or barbecue, or to hop on the bus to get wherever they need to go that day,” said Jill Locantore, executive director of Denver Streets Partnership, a group that advocates for pedestrian mobility in the city. “Colfax carries the lifeblood of our community, and too often, Colfax has broken our hearts, because it is not designed to be safe for the people whose lives depend on it.”
The pedestrian improvements are a long time coming for West Colfax residents.
Nearly a decade ago, residents came together to imagine what a more pedestrian-friendly throughway might look like.
“I’ve lived here for more than 30 years, this is the part of town that I’ve grown up in, that my parents and my grandparents raised their families in, and we can testify to the incredible impacts of traffic deaths along Colfax, along Federal,” said City Council President Jamie Torres, who represents the area. “That can only be improved because we build a different street, because we build a different environment, and that’s exactly what’s happening here.”
Torres specifically mentioned the benefit to kids who have to cross West Colfax Avenue to get to school, members of West Colfax’s Jewish community who cross to get to synagogue and pedestrians trying to reach the many local businesses that line Colfax Avenue.
West Colfax Avenue at Irving Street, July 12, 2023.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Initial upgrades began a few years ago, when the city altered traffic light timing and reduced speeds in an effort to make the corridor safer in 2020. Amy Ford, executive director of the Department of Transportation and Infrastructure, said that those changes decreased fatalities by 71 percent and serious injuries by 50 percent along the corridor.
“What you’ve seen us do is change and evolve and continue to grow about how we think about a complete street, how we create safety and elements for everyone as they enjoy the street, as they enjoy the community that it binds together and the businesses that long run alongside it,” Ford said.
Now, more improvements are coming to fruition thanks to funding from the voter-approved Elevate Denver Bond, which funds infrastructure projects across the city. Another portion of the funding is coming from the Colorado Department of Transportation.
“This all together is going to be a major win for the west side of the city, major improvement of safety, major improvement on accessibility and major permanent bus access and transit,” Mayor Mike Johnston said.
Making the notorious car corridor more pedestrian-friendly
City Council rezoned a number of properties on the east side of Colfax Avenue to promote pedestrian-facing businesses. That’s in anticipation of the Bus Rapid Transit project, which will bring big upgrades to RTD’s bus service on that side of Colfax Avenue.
But Locantore said there is still much more to be done to make Denver a safe city for pedestrians.
West Colfax Avenue at Irving Street, July 12, 2023.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
She hopes similar infrastructure upgrades will come to Denver’s other fast, busy and dangerous streets, including Federal Boulevard, Colorado Boulevard, Alameda Avenue and University Boulevard.
She said those streets in particular would benefit from upgrades, because they are streets that “feel like a highway,” with few crosswalks but a lot of local businesses frequented by pedestrians.
“This project is proof that if a community can imagine a street that prioritizes people over cars, the city can make that happen,” Locantore said. “I hope this project becomes inspiration for transformations of other streets throughout the city, and that we learn from this process so that we can streamline it and we don’t have to wait 10 years for the next transformation to happen.”
A crash on Interstate 290 on the Near West Side killed two people, including one pedestrian, and injured several others Sunday morning, police said.
Authorities said vehicles crashed on the Eisenhower Expressway near Damen Avenue just after 3 a.m. Two people were killed, and authorities said they believe one was outside of the vehicle at the time of the crash.
Three others were hospitalized, according to police. There was no update on their conditions Sunday morning.
Outbound lanes on I-290 were closed for about four hours Sunday morning, but reopened by 8 a.m., police said.
(FOX40.COM) — A person accused of a hit-and-run crash that left a pedestrian with critical injuries was arrested.
At around 1 a.m. on Friday, the Sacramento Police Department responded to reports of a collision near 16th Street between a vehicle and a pedestrian. Upon arrival, officers said they found a 32-year-old man with significant injuries. He was transported to a local hospital and remains in critical condition.
The driver reportedly fled the scene but was later identified by SPD as 41-year-old Joe Johnson of Sacramento. At around 7 p.m. Johnson was arrested in the 2300 block of Broadway and booked at the Sacramento County Main Jail on felony hit-and-run related charges.
BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — A horrifying video circulating on social media Friday appeared to show a man carrying a severed body part of someone killed by a train in Wasco.
The sheriff’s office said a man was arrested following the alleged incident.
The video was recorded following a deadly train collision and shared with 17 News.
The Kern County Fire Department said emergency crews responded to a report of a train colliding with a person near G and 7th streets in Wasco at around 8:05 a.m. A person was pronounced dead from the collision.
A witness told 17 News it appeared the man was carrying a severed leg.
The sheriff’s office said Friday afternoon Resendo Tellez, 27, removed evidence from the scene. Deputies located and arrested Tellez a short time later at 7th and F streets, according to inmate records.
Tellez was booked into jail for taking evidence from a scene and outstanding warrants, officials said in a release. BNSF is investigating the collision.
According to inmate records, Tellez is booked on a charge of removing or mutilating human remains.
Anyone with information is asked to call the sheriff’s office at 661-861-3110.
Friday’s incident marks possibly the second time this year someone removed a body part from a crash scene.
Carlos Baldovinos, executive director of The Mission at Kern County, said he wasn’t present for the incident, but was told someone brought a hand to the shelter three weeks ago, just days after a train hit a pedestrian in east Bakersfield.
He said law enforcement was called.
“I have never seen or heard of anything like that before,” Baldovinos said.
Where did the hand come from? That’s unclear.
The mystery deepens even further: police say Union Pacific investigators accounted for all body parts in the east Bakersfield crash.
BPD Sgt. Eric Celedon said he could not locate a call for service at the mission on the day the hand was reportedly brought there.
A pedestrian was struck and killed by a vehicle in northwest Fort Worth on Thursday night, police say.
Chalabala
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Police are investigating an accident that killed a pedestrian Thursday night in northwest Fort Worth, officials said.
Officers were dispatched to the intersection of State Highway 199 and Ten Mile Azle Road around 8:40 p.m. regarding a major accident. They found a pedestrian who’d been hit by a vehicle, police said. The pedestrian, who hasn’t been publicly identified, died at the scene.
The Traffic Investigations Unit will be investigating the accident, according to police. It’s not clear if the driver of the vehicle faces any charges.
Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Harriet Ramos covers crime and other breaking news for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
VAN NUYS — Prosecutors filed court papers Monday asking a judge to revoke Rebecca Grossman’s privilege to make telephone calls while in jail, contending that she has used the calls to “engage in wholly improper conduct or potentially illegal conduct” after being convicted of second-degree murder and other charges involving a crash that killed two young boys in Westlake Village.
A hearing is set Friday in a Van Nuys courtroom involving the prosecution’s request involving Grossman, a co-founder of the Grossman Burn Foundation.
In a 16-page filing first reported by the Los Angeles Times, Deputy District Attorneys Ryan Gould and Jamie Castro wrote that Grossman’s recorded phone calls include “admissions to violating the court protective order regarding the disclosure of evidence on the internet and to the press” and also “document numerous potential criminal conspiracies such as requests to disclose more protected discovery, discussion of various attempts to interfere with witnesses and their testimony and attempts to influence (the judge) in regards to sentencing and motions for a new trial.”
Grossman, 60, was taken into custody Feb. 23, within minutes of a jury finding her guilty of two counts each of second-degree murder and vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence and one count of hit-and-run resulting in death involving the Sept. 29, 2020, crash that left 11-year-old Mark Iskander and his 8-year-old brother, Jacob, dead.
The prosecutors cited a series of phone calls in which Grossman spoke to her husband, Peter, and her daughter, Alexis, between Feb. 23 and Feb. 25. Those included a Feb. 23 call in which she told her daughter that she wanted her to “unblock the videos” and “put everything out” and another the following day in which asked her husband if a person she identified as “Tom” could call the judge and “ask him to please let us have a new trial,” according to the prosecution’s filing.
In a call the day after the verdict, Grossman told her daughter, “These were the worst jurors. I knew they were bad jurors … Every single one of them, I could just tell. They weren’t on my side from the beginning. I just knew it,” according to the court papers.
The prosecution is requesting the judge grant a proposed court order that Grossman be housed in a portion of the jail where she has no access to a telephone and is not eligible for calls or visits other than with her attorneys, and that all of her incoming and outgoing mail be screened prior to distribution. The prosecutors contend that the same types of conversations can be conducted through those methods.
“While in custody the defendant immediately began using her phone privileges to engage in wholly improper conduct or potentially illegal conduct,” Gould and Castro wrote.
“In-custody phone privileges are just that, a privilege, and the defendant is using this privilege to make phone calls in an attempt to commit crimes and unduly influence witnesses and this court. Therefore, this court should revoke this privilege.”
The prosecution also alleges that “the defense is actively attempting to engage in jury tampering,” writing that it is “clear” that a private investigator working for the defense showed up at three of the jurors’ homes and was “not properly identifying himself as working for the defendant, Rebecca Grossman, which can only mean he is intentionally trying to mislead the jurors that he has contacted.”
The deputy district attorneys contend that the court should immediately require Grossman’s defense team to turn over all personal identifying information of jurors, noting that their names, addresses and telephone numbers were “sealed by operation of law upon recording the jury’s verdict in a criminal case.”
Grossman — who has remained jailed without bail since being taken into custody last month — could face up to 34 years to life in state prison. Sentencing is set April 10.
Prosecutors argued during the trial that Grossman and her then-boyfriend, former Dodger pitcher Scott Erickson, had been out for drinks earlier that evening and were speeding toward her nearby home in separate vehicles when Grossman’s white Mercedes-Benz SUV struck the boys while they were crossing Triunfo Canyon Road with their parents in a marked crosswalk.
Prosecutors said Grossman continued driving after striking the boys, eventually stopping about a quarter-mile away from the scene when her car engine stopped running.
Grossman’s lead attorney, Tony Buzbee, contended that it was Erickson who struck the boys first with his black Mercedes-Benz SUV.
Erickson was never called to testify in the case.
The prosecution alleged that Grossman was speeding at 81 mph in a 45-mph zone just seconds before impact, and that data from the vehicle’s so-called black box showing that she was driving 73 mph at the time of the crash was reliable.
In her closing argument, Castro told the jury that Grossman “continued driving as far as her car would let her” before the vehicle’s engine cut off about one-third of a mile away.
But Grossman’s lead attorney had told jurors in his closing argument that Grossman was traveling at 54 mph “at best” and that she didn’t know why her airbags had deployed. He said the vehicle rolled to a stop after the collision, and disputed the prosecution’s contention that she was impaired and fled the scene.
Buzbee alleged that authorities failed to properly investigate the crash and determine who actually hit the boys.
He called the case a “rush to judgment,” saying they “put their blinders on” and didn’t consider that anyone else might be responsible for the crash.
Again referring to Erickson, the defense attorney noted that “You couldn’t keep me away from this courthouse” to clear his own name if someone were accusing him.
In a recorded phone call two days after the verdict, Grossman told her husband, “You should call Scott Erickson and tell him to get on a video and that he needs to confess … I have a family,” according to the prosecution’s filing.
The deputy district attorneys wrote that Peter Grossman told his wife, “I know he needs to confess, but right now, I can’t even talk about the case, but that guy needs to … you’re in jail for him, and it drives me crazy,” and warned her that they “have to stop talking about the case on the recorded line” from county jail.