Los Angeles Times

4 fatal crashes prompt outcry, calls for action

South L.A. residents say city has not done enough to protect pedestrian­s, bicyclists.

- By Javier Panzar, Laura J. Nelson and Dakota Smith

Four fatal traffic collisions in a week in South Los Angeles, three of which were hit-and-runs, have drawn frustratio­n and criticism from residents and advocates who say city officials should do more to protect pedestrian­s and cyclists.

Since April 10, residents of four neighborho­ods have witnessed brutal reminders of how dangerous L.A.’s streets can be. The traffic crashes, which occurred within three miles of one another near the 110 Freeway, killed two cyclists, a pedestrian and a man crossing the street in his wheelchair.

The wave of fatal crashes

an angry response from the Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition, which said this week that city officials’ initial determinat­ion to reduce traffic deaths through the Vision Zero initiative had “dwindled into inaction.”

“Our streets are not safe or healthy, and they will not be until people walking and biking are given the same rights as people in vehicles,” the coalition said. “Hit-andruns are a public health crisis, and should treated as such, instead of legitimize­d as ‘acceptable tragedies.’ ”

Mayor Eric Garcetti, who created L.A.’s Vision Zero program in 2015, said Tuesday that he was committed to the program and would recommend $91 million in funding for Vision Zero in next year’s budget, more than triple the amount allotted this fiscal year.

“We’re saying here right now to every activist, we are with you on this,” Garcetti said.

He said the city has made more than 1,000 changes to streets — some of which have seen a high number of fatal crashes and severe injuries — that include highervisi­bility crosswalks and signs that tell drivers their speed. He also urged drivers to put away their cellphones.

Vision Zero called for a 20% reduction in traffic deaths on city streets by 2017. Last year, the number of people killed in L.A. traffic crashes fell 3% — far short of the goal. The number of pedestrian­s killed has jumped 82% since 2015.

The victims of the fatal crashes in the last week include 22-year-old cyclist Frederick Frazier, who was struck on the afternoon of April 10 in Manchester Square by a driver in a white Porsche Cayenne SUV.

The force of the impact snapped Frazier’s bicycle in half.

The driver fled into a nearby neighborho­od. Police have made no arrests and have not identified the vehicle, which officials said will have damage to the undercarri­age and bumper.

On Friday evening, a driver in a dark-colored SUV fled after fatally striking Alfredo Ortiz, 52, who was walking through a crosswalk at West Imperial Highway and South Figueroa Street.

On Sunday morning, Gregory Moore, 57, was crossing the intersecti­on of Century Boulevard and Main Street in his wheelchair when he was struck and killed by a possibly drunk driver, police said.

Just after midnight Monday, two drivers struck and killed a bicyclist in his 60s as he rode through a crosswalk at Century and Avalon boulevards. Both fled the scene. The man’s name has not been released by county coroner’s officials.

Detectives are also investigat­ing a fourth hit-and-run that left a man severely injured.

On April 11, after a group of cyclists rode through Manchester and Normandie avenues to hold a vigil for Frazier, a driver in a gold Toyota Avalon ran a red light, barreled through the intersecti­on and struck a man crossing the street, sending him flying into the air. He is still hospitaliz­ed.

An anonymous tip to the Compton Police Department led police to the Toyota, which had been left on a residentia­l street in the city, Los Angeles Police Department Detective Ryan Moreno said. The suspected driver is not the car’s owner, he said.

A review of video of the collision “will lead to a closure of this case and an arrest,” Moreno said. He desparked scribed the driver, who is being sought by police, as a young African American woman with a nose ring and a tattoo on the left side of her abdomen.

At a news conference Tuesday in Manchester Square, LAPD officials announced a $50,000 reward in the Frazier case for informatio­n that leads to the Porsche driver’s arrest and conviction.

As police officers arrived with a photo of Frazier, his mother, Beverly Owens, began to cry. She wrapped a blue blanket around herself and wailed, “My baby, my baby. Why didn’t they stop? Why didn’t they stop?”

Frazier, her only son, had Type 1 diabetes and rode his bicycle to manage his weight, Owens said. Most streets in Manchester Square don’t have bicycle lanes, she said, and he often pedaled close to the curb, where he was struck.

During the news conference, one Manchester Square resident questioned whether his death would lead to any bicycle lanes in the area, as it had in other areas of the county.

The LAPD now sends a supervisor to the scene of every crash that kills a bicyclist to evaluate what changes — such as bike lanes or an additional traffic signal — could help prevent future deaths, said LAPD commanding officer Jonathan Tom. He said the department would recommend installing bicycle lanes on Manchester and other arterials.

Friends and family asked for help paying for Frazier’s funeral expenses.

His death will leave a hole in the family, said cousin William Baptiste, because he brought love and positivity to every gathering. The pain of losing a loved one, he said, is compounded by the fact that traffic deaths “just don’t stop.”

“When the smoke clears, when the cameras leave, when everybody leaves, I’m all alone at home with my baby gone,” Owens said. “All I had of value to this dirty, low-down, disgusting Earth — you took him away.”

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? BEVERLY OWENS, center, visits the site in South Los Angeles where her 22year-old son, Frederick Frazier, a cyclist, was killed in a hit-and-run crash.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times BEVERLY OWENS, center, visits the site in South Los Angeles where her 22year-old son, Frederick Frazier, a cyclist, was killed in a hit-and-run crash.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? BEVERLY OWENS, left, said of the driver of a white Porsche Cayenne SUV who killed her son: “Why didn’t they stop? Why didn’t they stop?” Los Angeles police officials announced a $50,000 reward for informatio­n that leads to the driver’s arrest and...
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times BEVERLY OWENS, left, said of the driver of a white Porsche Cayenne SUV who killed her son: “Why didn’t they stop? Why didn’t they stop?” Los Angeles police officials announced a $50,000 reward for informatio­n that leads to the driver’s arrest and...

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