It's apparently a consequence of the lockdown. Speeders taking advantage of empty roads, but the results can be fatal.
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"Our Message this morning is very simple: we need to slow down," said Capt. John Pinto of the LAPD South Traffic Division.
MORE: Increase in tickets to extreme speeders amid COVID-19 shutdown, CHP says
CHP: 87% increase in tickets to drivers going more than 100 mph amid COVID-19 shutdown
LAPD officers say they've responded to too many crashes this month, marking a spike in traffic fatalities compared to this time last year.
"As we progressed through this COVID pandemic and we've kind of relaxed the stay-at-home orders and the businesses have opened, the traffic on the streets of Los Angeles has increased," said Deputy Chief Blake Chow of LAPD's Transit Services Bureau.
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Chow considers this a "re-acclimation period." But with deadly crashes on the rise throughout the city, police and the no profit "Streets are for Everyone" are working to raise awareness.
"Too many people are dying on the streets right now," said Damian Kevitt of Streets are for Everyone. "One person dying is too many."
"Put down the cellphone, slow down, obey the laws," said Pinto.
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