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Motorcyclist suffers serious injuries in Southington crash

Motorcyclist suffers serious injuries in Southington crash

Yahoo16-04-2025
A motorcyclist was seriously injured in a car crash in Southington on Monday evening.
The crash was reported at 8:24 p.m. on Queen Street just north of the Spring Street intersection where police, firefighters and medics responded after receiving reports of the collision, according to Lt. Justin Burke of the Southington Police Department.
Police said a 22-year-old Southington man was riding a Yamaha MT07 motorcycle north on Queen Street when he was involved in a collision with a BMW sedan driven by an 18-year-old from Southington. The teen was heading south on Queen Street and was trying to turn left into a McDonald's parking lot when the collision occurred in the northbound lane, according to police.
Police said witnesses alleged that the motorcyclist was driving erratically before the crash, doing wheelies and traveling at a high rate of speed. He suffered serious injuries and was taken to the Hospital of Central Connecticut.
The teen driving the BMW did not report any injuries.
The northbound side of Queen Street was closed at the Spring Street intersection until about 11 p.m. while investigators were at the scene. The crash remains under investigation. No charges have been filed.
Any witnesses or individuals with information have been asked by police to contact Officer Badgley at 860-378-1600, ext. 2468, or JBadgley@Southingtonpolice.org.
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Left to Right: Andre Margatini as Sam Bankman Fried, Janée Lucas as Sean Diddy Combs and Jonny Stein as Luigi Mangione in Luigi: the Musical. Left to Right: Andre Margatini as Sam Bankman Fried, Janée Lucas as Sean Diddy Combs and Jonny Stein as Luigi Mangione in Luigi: the Musical. Mariana Garcia, Luigi: the Musical Asked about the criticism that the musical has received, Margatini told Newsweek "We're quite glad to see that kind of feedback." Pointing to the response to the Mangione case, Margatini said, "People are right to be wondering whether it's too soon for this kind of narrative, but we should also be asking that about how we consumed it and distributed it with social media in the immediate aftermath." "It feels too soon, but we're living in an age of too soon," Margatini said. The musical itself hit the internet like a supernova, instantly going viral. "We did one interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, and then my face was on Laura Ingraham," Zeringue told Newsweek. 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