Road Racing In Chandler Leaves Man Dead; Suspect Driver Sought By Police 토토사이트
Neighbor responds to lethal road hustling episode in Chandler
CHANDLER, Ariz. - Police are looking for a driver they say was dashing one more vehicle in Chandler that prompted a rollover crash, leaving a man dead.
Chandler Police say officials answered Gilbert Road and Powell Place not long before 1:30 p.M. On Aug. 25 in the wake of getting reports of a red Chevrolet Camaro that collided with a block wall.
Once at the accident scene, officials tracked down the driver of the Camaro, 32-year-old Mahad Zara. He was taken to an emergency clinic where he later kicked the bucket.
Agents say Zara and another driver were hustling at paces of 80-90 mph northward on Gilbert Road when Zara failed to keep a grip on his Camaro, moved the vehicle, and collided with the wall.
As indicated by witnesses, the other vehicle was a dark or charcoal Dodge sports vehicle that kept traveling northward after Zara crashed.
"Analysts found video observation showing the two vehicles going at outrageous rates northward on Gilbert not long before the accident," police said.
A $1,000 reward is being presented for this situation. Police are asking anybody with any data, including any scramble cam video, to reach them at 480-782-4130 or through their site.
"I heard it in my lawn and afterward I ran out there and saw that piece of our wall had fallen. Then from that point, I could see the vehicle," says neighbor Brigitte Caruso.
Chandler just has 45 mph roads, says Chandler Police Det. Eva Zermeno, so you won't see anything over that.
"We have no sign that the vehicles or individuals that were driving knew one another. Simply the way that there was potential data that they were hustling … ," Zermeno said.
Criminal investigators say road hustling is an extensive issue, for the drivers, however for private neighborhoods where this is going on.
"It's simply a bustling road overall and there's been a great deal of development over the most recent couple of years. There's continually a ton of traffic and I would truly prefer not to be out on that walkway any longer," Caruso said.
Police say assuming that they will do this, perhaps they need to go to a raceway or a track and do it lawfully, that way it forestalls these kind of circumstances occurring and seriously jeopardizing different lives and individuals and property.