A California teenager fell to his death trying to film a social media stunt on Los Angeles’ new $500 million bridge: police
A bicycle owner crosses the Sixth Road Viaduct which is lit in pink to commemorate World AIDS Day on December 1, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.Mario Tama/Getty PhotosA 17-year-old boy in Los Angeles fell to his dying whereas climbing the arches of an iconic bridge.Police mentioned he wished to put up a "social media broadcast" …
A bicycle owner crosses the Sixth Road Viaduct which is lit in pink to commemorate World AIDS Day on December 1, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.Mario Tama/Getty Photos
A 17-year-old boy in Los Angeles fell to his dying whereas climbing the arches of an iconic bridge.
Police mentioned he wished to put up a “social media broadcast” when he slipped and fell.
The sixth Road bridge has typically been closed because of harmful stunts and drag races held there.
A 17-year-old boy fell to his dying on Saturday after trying to movie a social media stunt on the Los Angeles sixth Road bridge, police mentioned.
{The teenager}, who was not named, slipped whereas “climbing upon one of many arches with a purpose to put up, apparently, a social media broadcast,” Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore mentioned throughout a Tuesday board assembly.
“Tragically we see that location, whereas it has spawned a substantial amount of delight in Los Angeles, it has additionally sadly served as a backdrop now for tragedies similar to this,” Moore mentioned.
Police discovered the boy at round 2 a.m. on the sixth Road viaduct, and he was pronounced useless at a hospital, per The Related Press.
Moore didn’t say which social media platform {the teenager} was utilizing.
The $588 million bridge, opened in July, has been closed a number of instances because of incidents of vandalism and avenue stunts. It is notoriously change into the location of avenue takeovers and unlawful drag races, The Los Angeles Occasions reported.
Some TikTokers have filmed themselves climbing the bridge’s arches — which gentle up in pink and blue and are its defining characteristic.
In line with the Occasions’ Tom Carroll, plans for the bridge initially featured guardrails and stairs on its arches. Nevertheless, that design was ultimately scrapped, Caroll reported.