Los Angeles Times

Settlement in fatal crash

- By Emily Alpert Reyes emily.alpert @latimes.com

The Los Angeles City Council agreed Wednesday to spend $6 million to settle a lawsuit over the death of a teenage boy who was struck by a city truck while crossing a Highland Park intersecti­on.

At the time of Andres Perez’s death nearly three years ago, the executive director of his charter school told The Times that the 17year-old was an “awesome student” who had just been accepted to film school at Cal State L.A.

His family sued the city and the employee who was behind the wheel, saying he was “unfit and unqualifie­d” to drive the truck, had operated the vehicle in a reckless manner, and that the intersecti­on was “dangerousl­y defective.”

Andres was walking in a marked crosswalk when he was killed, according to the lawsuit.

A few months before his death, a Times analysis spanning 2002 to 2013 had identified South Avenue 60 and North Figueroa Street, where the accident occurred, as a particular­ly problemati­c intersecti­on for pedestrian­s.

However, city attorneys argued that the intersecti­on was not dangerous, and that part of the case was eventually dropped. City attorneys said in legal filings that there was no trash or debris obstructin­g the crosswalk, the markings were not uneven or worn away, and that the Bureau of Street Services had not received requests for service at that location.

The council voted 11 to 0 to approve the payment Wednesday.

“We are glad the case has been resolved and the family can move on from this tragedy,” attorney Brian Panish, who is representi­ng the Perez family, said Wednesday.

Rob Wilcox, a spokesman for City Atty. Mike Feuer, said that “our hearts go out to Andres’ parents.”

“It is hard to imagine the enormity of their loss,” Wilcox said.

The truck driver, David M. Francis, is still employed by the Bureau of Street Services as an equipment operator, according to the city personnel department.

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? A MEMORIAL in 2015 near the site where Andres Perez, 17, was hit by a city truck. L.A. officials agreed to pay $6 million to settle the Perez family’s lawsuit.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times A MEMORIAL in 2015 near the site where Andres Perez, 17, was hit by a city truck. L.A. officials agreed to pay $6 million to settle the Perez family’s lawsuit.

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