All posts tagged: public safety

Crash of stolen car kills 1, injures 12 after Chicago chase

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CHICAGO (WLS) — One person was killed and 12 others were injured in a violent crash on the city’s South Side Saturday that police say involved a stolen car after a short chase.

Police say an unmarked squad car first identified a stolen vehicle and attempted to get the driver to pull over at 66th Street and May. Police said the vehicle failed to stop and the officers initially gave chase, but abandoned it after a short distance.

The stolen vehicle ran a stop sign at 71st and Carpenter and struck another vehicle with eight people inside, killing 37-year-old Marie Carrion-Adame and injuring several, police said.

Three men inside the stolen vehicle were also hurt and were taken into custody and hospitalized. They have been charged with possession of a stolen vehicle.

Officials said 50 police officers and 11 ambulances wound up responding to the call.

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Jon speaks on NPR’s All Things Considered

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Listen to the story HERE.

In Hot Pursuit of Public Safety, Police Consider Fewer Car Chases

Police officers have to make complicated, split-second decisions every day — and whether or not to chase a fleeing suspect is no exception. And they often have to make this decision while driving a car at very high speeds.

Kansas City area police chief Steve Beamer says they don’t make it lightly. “We have to continually balance the need to apprehend that individual who chooses to flee against the safety of the public that may be at risk because of the pursuit,” Beamer says.

The risk is that the pursuit will cause a crash, killing police and innocent bystanders. Based on data from the Missouri State Highway Patrol, the Kansas Department of Transportation and an analysis of news articles from the last 10 years, there have been at least 706 pursuit crashes that have killed at least 23 people in the Kansas City area in the last 10 years. Hundreds more were injured, including 11 police officers. Police consultant Chuck Drago says nationally between 300 and 400 people are killed each year because of pursuits.

“As far as we can tell, it’s pretty much been stable for many, many, many years, and the numbers are sometimes difficult to pin down,” Drago says. It’s difficult because the reporting is voluntary.

Aaron Ambrose is a former Kansas City area police chief who says most of the time, pursuits just aren’t worth it. But there are exceptions.

“Now, if somebody’s grabbed a little kid and they’re holding them hostage — some guy went into the neighborhood and snatched up a kid and they’re driving around — I say we follow them until the wheels fall off. You’re never going to let that vehicle out of your sight regardless,” Ambrose says.

Technology could help cut down on the number of pursuits. Police already use helicopters and may use drones in the future. There’s also StarChase, a system that shoots a GPS-tracking dart from the front of a police car onto a fleeing vehicle.

Police agencies also have policies in place spelling out who officers are allowed to chase and how fast they can drive. But in Kansas City there are two states, six counties and dozens of municipalities — and all have differing policies. Some allow chases for a minor traffic violations. Others only allow pursuits of violent felons.

Jonathan Farris, former head of the group PursuitSAFETY, says there need to be more consistent policies. Even though he lost his son in a pursuit crash near Boston eight years ago, he thinks banning all pursuits is not realistic.

“I think it’s a reduction in police pursuits, not an elimination of police pursuits, and that reduction, again, the simplest way to do that is to say the only thing that is important enough to put other citizens in danger is to pursue violent felons only,” he says.

Of course, an officer might not yet know who’s running away, and that’s why activists like Farris want policy reform that will make police pursuits both more efficient and safer for everyone in in their paths.

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USA TODAY: Police chase deaths are up in 2014

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The number of people killed in high-speed police chases surged in 2014 to its highest level since 2007 despite efforts by police departments to reduce the risks of people getting killed and injured, a USA TODAY analysis shows.

A total of 385 people died in motor-vehicle crashes in 2014 that occurred while police were chasing a vehicle, up 16% from the 333 people killed in 2013, the USA TODAY review of federal records shows.

“A huge percentage of these deaths are unnecessary,” said Jonathan Farris, former chairman of PursuitSAFETY, which advocates to restrict police chases and improve reporting of chase-related deaths and injuries. Farris’ son Paul, 23, was killed in 2007 near Boston by a motorist being chased for a traffic violation.

Approximately 73 of the people killed in 2014 were bystanders — mostly people in their own cars that were hit by a fleeing motorist — and 77 were passengers in the fleeing vehicles. Twelve of those killed were children age 14 or younger, including an infant who had not yet turned one. Five were police officers.

Thousands more people were injured in the chases, which usually begin for minor infractions such as traffic violations. Although the federal government does not count injuries in police chases, five states that do keep track reported that a combined total of 1,764 people were injured in 2014 in their states.

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High-speed chases: Police make life-or-death decisions on the run

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Police chases of suspects at high speeds can quickly turn deadly for the pursuer, the pursued and bystanders — one reason law enforcement officers are taught to use caution before hitting the gas pedal.

Tuesday’s NYPD pursuit from New York City into Yonkers ended with a head-on crash along the Saw Mill River Parkway in Yonkers and one of the two suspects shot dead by police. The state Attorney General’s Office is now investigating the circumstances.

A little over two weeks earlier, Yonkers police chased a stolen van through busy city streets before the van crashed into an oncoming car. The car’s driver, 46-year-old Sharlene Stinson was killed; a 16-year-old boy inside the van died later and a girl, 14, suffered critical injuries. The youths were suspected of trying to steal parking meters.

Police say common sense should be used when officers are in hot pursuit. Speed, location, time and the alleged crime should be taken into consideration by ranking officers monitoring the chases as well as the officers involved.

Rockland Sheriff Louis Falco said supervisors shouldn’t be afraid of being second-guessed when cutting off a pursuit to protect civilians and officers.

He said a chase at 3 a.m. along empty streets deserves different consideration than one at high noon along congested roads in busy area.

“If you have a bank robbery or act of terrorism, a person shot, you treat the pursuit differently than someone who runs a light or is wanted on a non-violent crime,” Falco said. “These factors play into whether to maintain a pursuit.”

Officers have the option, at times, of blocking off a road and placing specialized equipment on the road that punctures tires. At least one company is marketing newer technology that allows pursuing officers to shoot a GPS tracking device onto the vehicle being chased, then track its whereabouts in real time, allowing the pursuit to be discontinued.

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USA TODAY: FBI vastly understates police deaths in chases

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The Federal Bureau of Investigation has drastically understated the number of police who have been killed in high-speed chases, counting only 24 deaths since 1980 despite records showing more than 370 officers killed in vehicle pursuits in that time span, a USA TODAY analysis shows.

At least 371 police officers were killed in chases from 1980 through 2014, according to a USA TODAY analysis of the U.S. Transportation Department database of fatal vehicle crashes and records of officer deaths maintained by two private police-memorial groups. That’s more than 15 times the number of chase-related deaths than the FBI counts, and makes chases the fifth-leading cause of police deaths, USA TODAY found.

The undercount is one of the most extreme examples of the federal government’s inability to accurately track violent deaths, and has led the FBI to minimize the danger of police chasing motorists, often at high speeds and in dangerous conditions, at a time when many police departments are restricting or considering restricting vehicle pursuits.

“The fact that these numbers have been undercounted further emphasizes the magnitude of the problem and the need for sensible restrictions on pursuit driving,” said Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, a think tank on law-enforcement issues. “This is important for the safety of officers and citizens alike.”

The FBI did not dispute USA TODAY’s findings and said it started taking steps in 2010 to improve its count of officers killed in police pursuits, but has yet to publish new information.

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Suspect shot, killed after NYPD pursuit ends in crash

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YONKERS, New York (WABC) — One person is dead and other is in custody following a series of events, including a police pursuit and crash that began in the Bronx Tuesday morning.

The crash shut down the Saw Mill River Parkway in both directions in Yonkers between exits 3 and 4, which is near the Bronx/Westchester County line.

Officials said NYPD officers were trying to pull over a car at about 11:45 a.m. near 242nd Street and Broadway in the Bronx for various motor vehicle violations. The driver didn’t stop and headed north on the Henry Hudson Parkway.

Police said the officers lost sight of the suspect’s car. But then reports came in that the same car was traveling southbound in the northbound lanes. The car passed the NYPD officers trying to pass him and struck several vehicles, just south of the cross-county parkway interchange.

One person was arrested at the scene. Police said a second suspect climbed out the window and ran into the woods, where there was a confrontation. An NYPD officer fired one shot, killing the man who ran from them.

Police searched for a third person who was believed to run into Tibbetts Brook Park, but it is unclear if that person exists.

One person who was in a car struck by the suspect vehicle suffered non-life threatening injuries. Two officers are being treated for trauma at a nearby hospital.

The Westchester County District Attorney’s office and New York state attorney general are investigating.

Video from NewsCopter 7 showed the scene shortly after the crash, as police were trying to gather information about the incident.

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