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![]() Enthusiast ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Joined Mar 4, '03 From Kirkland, Washington Currently Offline Reputation: 0 (0%) ![]() |
Cars crushed in street racing crackdown
By GREG RISLING ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/111...d_Hot_Rods.html ![]() Sergio Zavala, 18, looks over his yellow 1993 Honda after his car was crushed at Ecology Auto Parts in Rialto, Calif., Wednesday, June 20, 2007. Six vehicles were destroyed in front of their owners Wednesday at an auto graveyard as local law enforcement ramps up enforcement this summer after illegal street racing is suspected or responsible for 13 deaths in Southern California since March. (AP Photo/Nick Ut) RIALTO, Calif. -- Charles Hoang winced when the whoosh went out of the tires. Daniel Maldonado took pictures with a digital camera as glass exploded and rained down to the ground. The cars the teens had so meticulously souped up and tricked out were crushed Wednesday as part of a crackdown on illegal street racing in Southern California. "That's my heart, my dream," said Hoang, 18, of Chino, who was surrounded by friends as his 1998 Acura Integra was put into a compactor. "That's my girlfriend, the love of my life. The cops can crush my car, but they can't crush my memories." Authorities destroyed six vehicles Wednesday at an auto graveyard, hoping would-be racers think again after looking at the mashed machines. Illegal street racing is responsible for or suspected in 13 deaths in Southern California since March. The thrill-seeking, adrenaline-pumping activity is rampant in Riverside and San Bernardino counties east of Los Angeles where rows of tract homes line wide streets that attract racers. Nearly 1,000 people - drivers and spectators - have been arrested for investigation of street racing activities over the past two years in San Bernardino County alone. Police said they have managed to reduce illegal racing and related fatal collisions, but know the underground hobby still thrives. "We are making a dent," said Ontario police Cpl. Jeff Higbee. "But it's summertime and ... we expect to see more activity." Hoang said he was caught late last year racing his prized car, on which he spent at least $10,000 to get into top shape. The 350-horsepower engine topped out at 160 mph, Hoang said, swearing it could beat a Corvette or even a Ferrari. When police popped open the hood, Hoang said, they found a stolen transmission. Hoang flashed a receipt for the transmission he bought from his father who runs an auto shop and doubted the item was hot. "Everything on that car was practically brand new," Hoang said as he watched his car get moved to auto death row. "They should take out the stuff that matters, auction it off, and give the money to charity." Because racers put heavy stress on their vehicles, they often burn out or blow up parts. Higbee said the need for the expensive parts has created a "theft mill" where additional cars - usually Hondas or Acuras - are stolen and stripped of the necessary replacements. Most of the cars police examine are illegally modified. Sergio Zavala, 18, was pulled over in his 1993 yellow Honda Civic for a broken tail light in December. He had purchased a B-20 Vtech engine with a double-overhead cam a couple months before, and after a police investigation, was told it was stolen. Zavala, who admits he's been involved in street racing, estimates he and his mother spent about $10,000 on improvements to his car. After watching his Civic demolished, Zavala is left without a car as he plans to attend a fire academy in the fall. "It's heartbreaking to see this," said Zavala, who graduated from high school last year. "This is where all my time and money went." Maldonado also said he put plenty of time and effort working on his 1992 black Honda Civic. He was stopped in November by police in what Higbee described as an area where racers gather. The 18-year-old mechanic said a vehicle identification sticker apparently fell off and without it, police suspected some of the parts were stolen. Maldonado stood several feet away from his car as it was pounded into a heap of metal. Maldonado said he has taken the advice of police by racing legally on one of several race courses around Southern California. For the money spent in fines and other penalties - on average about $5,000 for illegally modified cars - Higbee said street racers could compete about 250 times a year at a legitimate track. "If you have to race, take it to a legal venue," Higbee said. "But as long as they keep racing illegally, we keep crushing their cars." All three men who saw their vehicles destroyed said they believe illegal street racing will continue to prosper across the region. "It will never go away," Maldonado said. "If it's in your heart, you will continue to do it until you can't anymore." This post has been edited by BlackCelicaGT94: Jun 20, 2007 - 6:03 PM -------------------- Cruisin down the street in my Infiniti...always lookin for my next trip to Sin City
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![]() Enthusiast ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Joined May 15, '05 From Toronto Currently Offline Reputation: 4 (100%) ![]() |
they have been doing somethin like this in Ontario for the last year. Toronto police crushed a civic and a CRX that they seized form 2 street racers. In ontario now, if you get caught street racing, you get arrested right away, your lisence taken away, thrown in jail for a week or somethin like that, you have to pay a fine to get out of jail, then also you have to pay to get your car back, pay for the storage of your car and then for what ever tickets you get *usually street racing, reckless driving, endangering the public, distrubing the peace, and i think theres a few more that they charge you with as a standard for gettin caught street racing*. But most of the time the fees and charges cost soo much that you cant afford to pay the tickets, so the police seize your car and crush it. They have been doing alot of crazy crap like that for awhile now.
but i do think that it serves the ppl who r stupid enough to take their car and endanger ppls lives should have their cars taken away and crushed. There have been soooo many deaths in toronto and the GTA in the last few years regarding street racers. But at the same time, i think that when cops have their own discression about weither or not a person was stret racing is twisted. One of my friends was driving his modified corvette last summer and swerved to miss a garbage bag that fell out of a pickuptruck bed, was doing 140km/h, only about 20km/h faster than average crusing speed on toronto highways. Swirved out of the way really quickly, lost controll, slammed sideways into a meadian, ripped his car in half, he got ejected out of the car *out the passanger side front window, he slipped out of his seat belt*, landed about 200feet away from the car. He survived for about 3 weeks b4 he passed away, but this stupid OPP *ontario provincial police* officer, Cam Woolie, said that because his car was modified and was going slightly faster than most other cars, he was street racing, even though he was driving alone. |
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