Los Angeles commuters drove to work with more than usually jittery nerves yesterday morning following a spate of random freeway shootings that have killed at least four drivers and injured four others.
Police have reported at least eight incidents in the past month, three of them over the weekend, resulting in non-stop coverage on local radio stations that has only fuelled the anxiety of Angelenos further.
In one attack, a 16-year-old boy got into a road-rage style argument with the occupants of another car, who chased him on to the freeway and shot and injured him.
In another, a 19-year-old was hit several times but managed to manoeuvre off the road and seek help from an emergency medical crew responding to an entirely different incident.
The shootings have occurred over a vast geographical area spanning three counties - Los Angeles, Orange and Riverside - and do not, at this stage, appear to be related.
Freeway shootings, however, feed directly into one of the greatest fears of American road-users and they have received prominent coverage in the media.
A similar frenzy erupted in the summer of 1987, when five people were killed and a dozen injured in a spate of attacks.
Traffic jams, road rage and a high rate of gun ownership are almost certainly the main factors behind the outbursts of violence, although police said they were not ruling out some kind of gang vendetta in at least one of the current cases.
Ironically, the number of freeway shootings is down this year. Even including the latest incidents, there have been 11 shootings so far in 2005, compared with 36 in the whole of 2004 and 36 in each of the previous two years.
Police have advised motorists not to alter their schedules in any way, but urged them to keep their emotions to themselves and clear out of the way if anyone speeds up behind them or flashes their lights aggressively.
- INDEPENDENT
Four killed in spate of random LA freeway shootings
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