Families of fatal crash victims file government claim against CHP, state of California

The families of two of the four people who died after a pair of crashes on the 605 Freeway last month announced they are filing a government claim against the California Highway Patrol and the state of California.

A government claim is filed by victims for damages believed to be caused by a state or its employees and is considered to be the first step in civil litigation.

The claim alleges that a CHP officer’s negligence was the “direct cause” of a collision that disabled the victims’ vehicle. That same officer then failed to secure the roadway after the first crash, which led to a second one.

The incident itself, which occurred around 1 a.m. on July 20 on the 605 near the 105 Freeway interchange in Norwalk, was initially thought to have been just one crash. However, authorities later confirmed that there were two separate crashes, the first involving a CHP cruiser and a Nissan occupied by four people. The second crash involved a Kia with two occupants – including an impaired driver – and the Nissan.
It was not initially known how much time transpired between the two crashes, but due to the force of the second collision between the Kia and Nissan, the latter car burst into flames, and all four people inside were killed.

 

 

 

It was later revealed that the quartet — Julie Hamori, her boyfriend Armand Del Campo, and their two friends, Jordan Partridge and Sam Skocilic – were all friends returning from a night out. According to Hamori’s aunt, one of the victims, Partridge, called her mother after the first crash with the CHP car as they were waiting inside the disabled vehicle for help.
However, in the middle of her sentence, the line went dead, the aunt, Kathy Sickel, told KTLA shortly after the incident.

 

 

 

 

The driver of the Kia who was found to be intoxicated was identified as 26-year-old Iris Salmeron. She was arrested and is facing multiple felony charges, including DUI.

Her passenger was not identified, and although both they and Salmeron were said to have sustained serious injuries in the crash, they both survived.
Just over a month after losing their loved ones, the families of the two who were likely to be married – Armand Del Campo and Julie Hamori – announced the filing of the government claim against both CHP and the state of California.

 

 


A press conference was held on Tuesday morning to announce the filing, with tearful family members providing gut-wrenching details on the tragedy and how it has affected them.

“My sister had to go through Julie’s room, and when she saw the wedding dress that she had bought with Armand’s mother, she said ‘It was perfect’,” Kathy Sickel said at Tuesday’s press conference while holding up a picture of her niece. “That wedding dress would have fit her perfectly.”
“It’s been five weeks of no answers…it’s been five weeks of silence [surrounding] the circumstances that led to the death of my son,” said Del Campo’s mother, Angie Reed, through tears. “Armand was at the pinnacle of his life…he had started a brand new job and had just finished his first week. He was really excited because it was going to give them the opportunity to start their lives.”

 

“They had beautiful, bright futures,” Reed added.

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