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On April 6, 1970, four California Highway Patrol officers were killed in a 4 1 ⁄ 2 ‑minute shootout in the Newhall region of Southern California. The incident is a landmark in CHP history because of both its emotional impact and the procedural and doctrinal reforms implemented by the CHP in the incident's aftermath.
The Newhall incident, also called the Newhall massacre, was a shootout on April 5–6, 1970, in Valencia, California, United States, [a] between two heavily armed criminals and four officers of the California Highway Patrol (CHP).
Just before 8 a.m., California Highway Patrol received reports of rocks in the northbound traffic lane, according to the highway patrol’s Traffic Incident Information Page.
The Officer Down Memorial Page reports 633 deaths in the line of duty. [27] The leading cause of death for 2021 was COVID-19 at 454 deaths followed by gunfire at 64 deaths. Fifty-eight officers died in vehicle-related deaths (vehicular homicide, struck by vehicle while on-duty, automobile crash during pursuit).
A woman was found dead of an apparent hit-and-run crash late Friday morning on Highway 99 just south of downtown Modesto, the California Highway Patrol reported. The CHP was notified at about 11: ...
Jul. 13—On Wednesday at approximately 1 p.m., California Highway Patrol Grass Valley officers monitored reports of a "major injury crash" on Highway 20 east of Dorsey Drive in Grass Valley ...
The 1955 GMC bus involved in the accident was owned by labor contractor Jesus Ayala and driven by Pablo Navarro Arellanos from the starting point of Calexico, California, bound to the intended destination of a High and Mighty Farms field, approximately 2–3 miles (3.2–4.8 km) away from the crash site. [1]
All lanes of Interstate 15 to Las Vegas that were closed due to big rig accident have reopened, CHP says Suhauna Hussain, Roger Vincent July 27, 2024 at 6:34 PM