6 People Killed In Wild Fiery Car Accident On Slauson and La Brea (Video) Hard To Watch🤦🏿‍♂️

bnew

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from the defunct website Nicole's family created.


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May 2018 is when everything changed for her. Looking back on it, I believe she fell victim to her own drive and ambition. She was achieving one goal after another with no real breaks in-between. I’m no medical expert but it now seems that the stress of school and other things in her life, triggered or exacerbated some sort of underlying condition.

One night, I got a call from Nicole who had been arrested and she placed an officer on the phone who proceeded to tell me that someone needs to come to Houston ASAP because she was “deteriorating” right before his eyes. Recently within the past 6 weeks, I learned that during her booking process, she was first erratic and talking a bunch of nonsense, and then all of a sudden she went into a catatonic state where she wasn’t moving. Suddenly, it was as if the lights went off and she’s there but it appeared as if she couldn’t hear or interact with anybody around her.

The doctor that is currently evaluating her believes that these symptoms may indicate frontal lobe epilepsy, which often lasts around 30 seconds and can cause stiffness in the body and loss of awareness. It is usually followed by amnesia where the person doesn’t remember blacking out. We are hoping the court will give us permission to have Nicole tested for the neurological and psychiatric conditions that can cause these types of symptoms.

This particular type of epilepsy is oftentimes missed by doctors because many of the symptoms can also indicate psychiatric problems. If she does have a neurological condition on top of or instead of her bipolar disorder, we want to be able to test for it so she can be treated appropriately and so we can better understand what happened on August 4th.

I would like to make it clear the family and Nicole was not aware that she was having these seizure like events. That is something that was brought to our attention after the accident and she was evaluated by an independent psychiatrist. From my understanding, the only people who witnessed it was the police and an acquaintance….none of whom are medical professionals.

Now back to the story around her first manic episode. I just can’t imagine how scared she must’ve been with worrying about school, and then getting arrested for the first time ever. I was able to track down her roommate who told me that she didn’t sleep much the night after being released and was up late cleaning, a very common behavior in bipolar individuals. The same thing happened the night I arrive where Nicole spent almost the entire night obsessively cleaning, doing laundry, and shuffling things around. Basically doing anything to keep busy is what it seemed like to me. We tried so hard to convince her to go to the hospital, but she said that she didn’t trust the people there and was afraid they would pump her full of drugs. She kept saying that she works with nurses who make mistakes all the time and that she’s always having to fix their mistakes so she didn’t trust them.

She kept checking her blood pressure and when she saw how high it was, it caused her even more anxiety. At one point she thought her organs were going into system failure and wanted a respirator to open up her lungs, even suggesting we take her to some place that does “floatation therapy”, which she thought would help calm her down and lower her blood pressure.

I managed to convince her to go with me to see a student counselor at UT Health. When we got there, she started getting really anxious again but she was able to calm herself down enough to finally speak with the person. The counselor was somehow able to convince her to voluntarily bring herself into a psychiatric treatment facility and they even provided us with a campus police escort.

We arrived at the hospital and as we were getting out, she started to get anxious again and didn’t want to go in. I was able to get my oldest brother on the phone with her and he convinced her to go inside, which she did. Getting her in felt like a miracle at the time. People who think it’s easy to get someone with a mental illness to the hospital when they are completely paranoid, has never had to experience what I experienced. At the end of the day, you cannot force anyone to get help unless they are a danger to themselves and others. And at that point, we had no reason to believe she was a danger to anyone, including herself.

As we got inside the hospital she started to get more and more anxious. She was pacing around the hospital lobby while being paranoid and ranting about a bunch of things. I just remember crying my eyes out being inconsolable. The lady next to me kept trying to comfort me while Nicole kept pacing back and forth. At one point someone came out and took her blood pressure and I believe it was something high like 163/110. This made her even more anxious and she kept saying that she needed to calm herself down and bring down her blood pressure, which probably made her even more anxious.

Suddenly and out of nowhere, I heard a loud bang! There was a door in the hallway that had a small glass partition and she had banged her head into it, shattering the glass and getting a cut on her forehead. As soon as that happened, the campus police officer that had escorted us issued an Emergency Detainment Order (EDO) and an ambulance came and took her to the ER which was right next door to the psychiatric hospital where we were.

One of the doctors that treated her wounds later told me how even with a cut on her forehead, she was happy and singing Bob Marley’s “Don’t Worry” song and that he was singing along with her. Finally, she was able to fall asleep and I was also finally able to go back to her house and sleep for the first time since I had arrived in Houston. I was physically, mentally and emotionally exhausted.

She was eventually moved from Emergency Psychiatric to the psychiatric facility where she was treated and diagnosed with bipolar disorder. She was probably there around 5 to 7 days and I visited her every day. I was there for a little over a week but had to leave shortly after she was discharged. She had so much family support during that period to help her get through this. Before I left Houston, her closest cousin had flown in from Atlanta and took over after I left. Then my brother took over after driving all the way from Florida to Houston and was there with her for a short-while. Then my mother flew in from Jamaica and was there for about 2 months from May until July 18th. And then my other sister was there to celebrate her birthday at the end of June. She was also with a lot of family around the end of June because a lot of people were in town for a funeral. ...
 

Luke Cage

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Nurse charged in Windsor Hills crash that killed 6 people pleads not guilty​




By

November 8, 2024 / 5:28 PM PST / KCAL News

A nurse charged with the deaths of six people after a fiery crash in 2022 pleaded not guilty.

Prosecutors charged Nicole Lorraine Linton, 39, with six counts of murder and five counts of vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence following the deadly crash two years ago.

If convicted as charged, she could face 90 years to life in prison.

nicole-linton.jpg

Nicole Linton was charged with six counts of murder and five counts of vehicular manslaughter. CBS

The people killed in the violent crash included an entire family — 23-year-old Asherey Ryan, 24-year-old Reynold Lester, their unborn child and their infant Alonzo, who was about to celebrate his first birthday.

The family was driving to a prenatal doctor's appointment.

When the charges were filed District Attorney George GascĂłn said his office cannot file a manslaughter charge in a case involving an unborn child.

"This is a case that will always be remembered for the senseless loss of so many innocent lives as they simply went about their daily routines," GascĂłn said in a statement sent in 2022.

The deadly crash happened in August 2022 in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Windsor Hills. Investigators said Linton drove her Mercedes-Benz through a red light while going more than 90 mph. The speed limit was 35 mph.

Surveillance video showed the Mercedes blowing through the light and broadsiding another vehicle, which exploded into flames and left a trail of fire leading up to a gas station's sign.

In total, the crash involved eight vehicles including Linton's Mercedes. In addition, to the young parents and their infant, two other women died in the crash, including 42-year-old Natiesha Lewis and her friend 38-year-old Lynette Noble. They were on their way to the mall.

Lewis' family used DNA to identify her body.

"My sister has children that are mourning, that are not aware," said the victim's sister Jasmond Nelson. "It's just so tragic. It's kind of unbelievable to even be here having this conversation. My family is broken we are grieving."

Prosecutors said Linton has a history of mental health issues and a problematic driving history. They claimed she did not have a California driver's license and was involved in a collision that caused bodily injury in 2020.

Following the crash, Linton's sister, Camille, published a website that detailed her upbringing, battles with mental health and a detailed account of her interactions on the day of the crash. Camille said her sister called her about four minutes before the collision.

"When I see that video, I don't see Nicole driving...I see her mental illness driving. Something must've happened that caused her to completely disassociate with reality," she said.

Also on the website, which appears to have been shut down, Linton's family passed along their condolences to the victims and their loved ones. Camille clarified that she did not want to absolve her younger sister of accountability in the crash but hoped that she would be treated fairly, given her mental health.

She said her little sister's first manic episode happened in 2018.

"What people must understand is that over 90% of our interaction with Nicole has been 'normal' and even when she is manic, it has never been anything that would cause us to believe she was a danger to herself or other people," she wrote on the website. "Not once in the past 4 years was I ever worried that something like what happened on August 4th could happen."

The family of one of the victims called the site disturbing during a 2022 interview.
Lock up the family for trusting a person who has had manic episodes with a car.
 

Lakers Offseason

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Nurse charged in Windsor Hills crash that killed 6 people pleads not guilty​




By

November 8, 2024 / 5:28 PM PST / KCAL News

A nurse charged with the deaths of six people after a fiery crash in 2022 pleaded not guilty.

Prosecutors charged Nicole Lorraine Linton, 39, with six counts of murder and five counts of vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence following the deadly crash two years ago.

If convicted as charged, she could face 90 years to life in prison.

nicole-linton.jpg

Nicole Linton was charged with six counts of murder and five counts of vehicular manslaughter. CBS

The people killed in the violent crash included an entire family — 23-year-old Asherey Ryan, 24-year-old Reynold Lester, their unborn child and their infant Alonzo, who was about to celebrate his first birthday.

The family was driving to a prenatal doctor's appointment.

When the charges were filed District Attorney George GascĂłn said his office cannot file a manslaughter charge in a case involving an unborn child.

"This is a case that will always be remembered for the senseless loss of so many innocent lives as they simply went about their daily routines," GascĂłn said in a statement sent in 2022.

The deadly crash happened in August 2022 in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Windsor Hills. Investigators said Linton drove her Mercedes-Benz through a red light while going more than 90 mph. The speed limit was 35 mph.

Surveillance video showed the Mercedes blowing through the light and broadsiding another vehicle, which exploded into flames and left a trail of fire leading up to a gas station's sign.

In total, the crash involved eight vehicles including Linton's Mercedes. In addition, to the young parents and their infant, two other women died in the crash, including 42-year-old Natiesha Lewis and her friend 38-year-old Lynette Noble. They were on their way to the mall.

Lewis' family used DNA to identify her body.

"My sister has children that are mourning, that are not aware," said the victim's sister Jasmond Nelson. "It's just so tragic. It's kind of unbelievable to even be here having this conversation. My family is broken we are grieving."

Prosecutors said Linton has a history of mental health issues and a problematic driving history. They claimed she did not have a California driver's license and was involved in a collision that caused bodily injury in 2020.

Following the crash, Linton's sister, Camille, published a website that detailed her upbringing, battles with mental health and a detailed account of her interactions on the day of the crash. Camille said her sister called her about four minutes before the collision.

"When I see that video, I don't see Nicole driving...I see her mental illness driving. Something must've happened that caused her to completely disassociate with reality," she said.

Also on the website, which appears to have been shut down, Linton's family passed along their condolences to the victims and their loved ones. Camille clarified that she did not want to absolve her younger sister of accountability in the crash but hoped that she would be treated fairly, given her mental health.

She said her little sister's first manic episode happened in 2018.

"What people must understand is that over 90% of our interaction with Nicole has been 'normal' and even when she is manic, it has never been anything that would cause us to believe she was a danger to herself or other people," she wrote on the website. "Not once in the past 4 years was I ever worried that something like what happened on August 4th could happen."

The family of one of the victims called the site disturbing during a 2022 interview.

So they charged her six counts of murder, but only five counts of manslaughter because the sixth was an unborn child? So murder charge for killing an unborn child, but not applicable for manslaughter? That makes no sense.

Also, if they can charge her for murder for killing an unborn child, what about all the fukking abortions California allows?:jbhmm:
 

bnew

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So they charged her six counts of murder, but only five counts of manslaughter because the sixth was an unborn child? So murder charge for killing an unborn child, but not applicable for manslaughter? That makes no sense.

Also, if they can charge her for murder for killing an unborn child, what about all the fukking abortions California allows?:jbhmm:

if i throw away a lcd monitor in the trash because it has a dead pixel and then someone negligently or otherwise throws a rock threw my home window that lands squarely on my other LCD monitor irreparably damaging it; do you believe that is the same thing? :jbhmm:
 

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if i throw away a lcd monitor in the trash because it has a dead pixel and then someone negligently or otherwise throws a rock threw my home window that lands squarely on my other LCD monitor irreparably damaging it; do you believe that is the same thing? :jbhmm:


You're comparing killing unborn kids to LCD monitors? :gucci:
 

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no, i'm comparing the outcome being the same while the process and responsibility are entirely different.


Whether the unborn child is killed through aborting and or an accident such as this, the outcome is the same. Why then do the Cali laws treat one scenario as if the child is a living person with rights, and the other scenario, the child is treated as an organism without any rights? Can you explain that without any dumb analogies?
 

the cac mamba

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Whether the unborn child is killed through aborting and or an accident such as this, the outcome is the same. Why then do the Cali laws treat one scenario as if the child is a living person with rights, and the other scenario, the child is treated as an organism without any rights? Can you explain that without any dumb analogies?
because it's up to the woman risking her life having the kid. that's why
 
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