Los Angeles Times

Shock, pain after crash

Nurse, 37, is arrested in the deadly collision in Windsor Hills

- By Nathan Solis, Noah Goldberg, Jonah Valdez, Gregory Yee and Richard Winton

A speeding car, a sickening crunch, a ball of fire. Before anyone had time to react, a multi-vehicle crash turned a busy intersecti­on into one of the most gruesome scenes on Los Angeles streets in recent years, leaving five people dead, including a pregnant woman, and family members searching for answers.

Investigat­ors on Friday arrested Nicole Lorraine Linton, 37, a registered nurse, in connection with the crash in Windsor Hills.

Linton was at the wheel of a dark-colored MercedesBe­nz that was going as fast as 100 mph down La Brea Avenue when it ran a red light at the intersecti­on with Slauson Avenue about 1:35 p.m. Thursday, hitting several vehicles, according to the California Highway Patrol.

The crash has left the family of 23-year-old Asherey Ryan, the pregnant woman who was killed, in disbelief.

Cotie Davis, Ryan’s youngest sister, recalled speaking with her sibling that morning.

On her way out of their South Los Angeles apartment for a doctor’s appointmen­t, Ryan told Davis, 20, who styles hair, that she wanted to get her hair done.

“She wanted braids too,

probably just like this,” Davis said, running her hands down her two-toned braids that reached past her waist.

Ryan would ask for a different color each time, she said. She’d return, sometimes with her hair blue, other times purple.

But Thursday morning was the last time Davis would see her sister alive.

Within minutes of leaving the apartment, Ryan’s car was smashed by Linton’s Mercedes. Ryan, who was 8½ months pregnant, was in the car with her boyfriend and 1year-old son.

The fiery crash left five people dead, along with Ryan’s unborn child, while onlookers and family struggled to understand exactly what happened.

Davis and her family started worrying when they hadn’t heard from Ryan for several hours.

Speaking to The Times from the doorway of the apartment where the sisters lived with their mother, Davis recalled her family’s desperate attempts to reach Ryan on Thursday.

Calls went straight to voicemail. Texts to her iPhone were sending green, a sign that Ryan’s phone was dead.

It didn’t make sense, Davis said. Her sister always kept a charger in the car.

She thought the worst, wondering whether her sister was in the deadly crash, her phone broken in the collision.

The gut-wrenching confirmati­on came in a text from a friend at the crash site. He took a photo of someone he believed to be Ryan and sent it to Davis.

It didn’t show Ryan’s face, but the image was just enough for their mother to recognize her clothes, and for Davis to recognize her feet and her tattoo.

“When you spend that much time with someone, you’re gonna know each part of them,” she said.

Davis and her family collapsed. Their screams drew the attention of their nextdoor neighbor, Josephine Harris, who ran over.

“Rey Rey is gone,” they told Harris.

Few details had emerged by the day after the crash.

Surveillan­ce video shows a Mercedes-Benz barreling down La Brea at a high speed as dozens of cars cross on Slauson. The Mercedes does not appear to slow down before running a red light and slamming into cars in the intersecti­on. It then bursts into flames and hurtles into a light pole, where it comes to rest.

After the crash, a streak of fire burned on the ground and billowing smoke could be seen from miles away.

Officer Franco Pepi, a California Highway Patrol spokespers­on, said Thursday that investigat­ors had determined the Mercedes was traveling “at a high rate of speed” and ran a red light,

‘I was like, “Girl, I got you — I fed the first baby, so I could feed the second one.” ’

— JOSEPHINE HARRIS, neighbor of crash victim, on cooking a meal for the family

but that the reason it did so was not immediatel­y known.

At least six vehicles were involved in the crash, Pepi said. Eight people were injured.

Authoritie­s are checking Linton’s bloodwork to determine whether she was intoxicate­d at the time of the crash, according to two law enforcemen­t sources.

A member of her family declined to speak to a Times reporter Friday.

Linton was arrested on suspicion of vehicular manslaught­er, and prosecutor­s expect to file charges Monday, accusing her in the deaths of the unborn child as well as the five others.

Highway Patrol investigat­ors estimate that her Mercedes was going 80 mph to 100 mph as it approached the junction and ran the red light, and evidence gathered so far shows no sign of braking, according to two law enforcemen­t sources.

A specialize­d CHP accident investigat­ion team is extracting data from the Mercedes’ computers that capture speed, braking and accelerati­on.

At least nine serious crashes occurred along that stretch of La Brea Avenue between 2013 and 2021, according to CHP data. None were fatal.

The Los Angeles County coroner’s office has not released the names of anyone killed in the crash except for Ryan’s.

Davis said Ryan and their other sibling, Sha’seana Kerr, were born in Los Angeles and raised in Inglewood.

In recent years, the family moved to California City, where their grandmothe­r lives, before returning to Los Angeles.

As the oldest sibling, Ryan, who went by Rey Rey, was the family’s backbone.

Her birthday would have been in September; Davis’ followed in November.

Still, Ryan had put talk of her own celebratio­n aside, telling Davis, “Hey, sister, I already know what I’m gonna get for your birthday.”

Ryan always bragged about her sisters and their accomplish­ments, Davis said. She beamed with pride when she found out Davis had started studying for her college degree in criminal justice.

Ryan followed her younger sister into the program, but it was Davis’ graduation that she looked forward to.

“I cannot imagine not having her at my graduation,” Davis said before bursting into tears.

Harris, the neighbor, also felt Ryan’s sudden absence. After Harris moved to L.A. from Arkansas two years ago, it was Ryan who immediatel­y befriended her.

Their front doors were separated by several feet, and the two often ran into each other in the apartment hallway, where they would talk about boyfriend drama, the struggles of pregnancy and past heartache.

Harris had lost her mother in 2019 and, before that, her brother in a house fire. In one recent conversati­on, Ryan knocked on Harris’ door, took a sniff and asked whether she was cooking her famous fried chicken.

“I was like, ‘Girl, I got you — I fed the first baby, so I could feed the second one,’ ” Harris said, referring to Ryan’s toddler and the baby still on the way.

“I wake up, I expect she gon’ come out the door,” she said.

But Harris hasn’t been able to eat or sleep since hearing the screams next door and learning her friend was dead.

“When I walk out the door, that’s the first thing I see: Rey Rey,” she said. “And it’s not there no more.”

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? CARMEN DORSEY, left, and London Carter pray as Vera Jones lights a candle Friday at a memorial near the scene of a multi-car crash that left five people dead, including a pregnant woman, in Windsor Hills.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times CARMEN DORSEY, left, and London Carter pray as Vera Jones lights a candle Friday at a memorial near the scene of a multi-car crash that left five people dead, including a pregnant woman, in Windsor Hills.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? COTIE DAVIS, 20, of Hyde Park, the sister of crash victim Asherey Ryan, 23, talks about the loss of her sibling, who was 8 1⁄2 months pregnant.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times COTIE DAVIS, 20, of Hyde Park, the sister of crash victim Asherey Ryan, 23, talks about the loss of her sibling, who was 8 1⁄2 months pregnant.
 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? HIGHWAY PATROL and other officials investigat­e wreckage and debris at the crash site Thursday. The dark Mercedes-Benz that plowed into several other vehicles was going as fast as 100 mph down La Brea Avenue when it ran a red light at the intersecti­on, authoritie­s said.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times HIGHWAY PATROL and other officials investigat­e wreckage and debris at the crash site Thursday. The dark Mercedes-Benz that plowed into several other vehicles was going as fast as 100 mph down La Brea Avenue when it ran a red light at the intersecti­on, authoritie­s said.
 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? A WORKER cleans up at the crash scene Friday. Authoritie­s are checking the Mercedes driver’s bloodwork to determine whether she was under the inf luence.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times A WORKER cleans up at the crash scene Friday. Authoritie­s are checking the Mercedes driver’s bloodwork to determine whether she was under the inf luence.

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