Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "Road incident deaths in California" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 335 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
In September 1964, a state official, who was seeking to serve notice of revocation of his driver's license, reported that his sister-in-law said Espinosa had been slain in Mexico by relatives of crash victims. [12] That account was disputed. [13] In 1967, a federal court lawsuit filed by the victims' families was settled by payment of $1.5 million.
Joe Montana: In August 2013, a hoax news article claimed that the former 49ers quarterback had been killed in a car crash. [ 365 ] Bella Montoya : A 76-year old Ecuadorian woman who was declared dead by a doctor on 9 June following a suspected stroke, only to be found gasping for air after her coffin was opened at a funeral parlor five hours later.
State officials have confirmed 9 people died in the storm, including four hit by trees in Northern California and at least two in car wrecks in Southern California.
Shootout in which four California Highway Patrol officers were killed, deadliest day in California law enforcement history [88] [89] 7: Symbionese Liberation Army shootout: Los Angeles: 1974-05-17: 6: Members of the group shot or burned in South LA house during shootout with LAPD [90] [91] 8: Norco shootout: Norco: 1980-05-09: 3
California lawmakers have created a wildfire insurance fund with access to $21 billion that is meant to ensure that Southern California Edison remains solvent and victims' claims are paid in full.
A California teenager has admitted to making hundreds of swatting calls - hoax emergency calls - over a two-year period, creating "fear and chaos" when police responded to his false reports of ...
According to a 2003 report EPA's Assessment of Risks from Radon in Homes from the United States Environmental Protection Agency, epidemiological evidence shows a clear link between lung cancer and high concentrations of radon, with 21,000 radon-induced U.S. lung cancer deaths per year—second only to cigarette smoking. [3]