Driver charged with attempted murder in connection with CarMax dealership crash
A 25-year-old man was charged with attempted murder in connection with a vehicle ramming incident that left several people injured at a Los Angeles-area CarMax dealership, court documents show.
Andrew Arroyo was charged with one count of attempted murder and nine counts of assault with a deadly weapon in connection with the Saturday afternoon crash on the 8600 block of S. La Cienega Boulevard in Inglewood, California, according to a criminal complaint filed Tuesday.
Ten people were hurt in the incident, according to the complaint, which noted that one victim was left comatose due to a brain injury.
It was unclear if Arroyo has retained counsel. An email to the county public defender's office was not immediately returned outside regular business hours Tuesday night.
Of the people injured, one was a CarMax employee who was treated at a hospital for non-life-threatening injuries and later released, the company said in a statement Tuesday; it had previously said two of the injured were employees.
The driver was a customer who'd had his vehicle appraised, CarMax said.
"Employees share that they observed his behavior turn suddenly erratic, but they did not perceive it to be related to the appraisal offer,' a company spokesperson told NBC Los Angeles.
Video of the crash showed a silver Subaru backing into the business via a doorway before making a turn and driving out via another doorway.
Police said the driver left the store following the crash and turned himself in to the Los Angeles Police Department at a police academy.
"We want to extend our deepest gratitude to the broader Inglewood community for their outpouring of support during this awful event," CarMax said.
Arroyo was also charged with vandalism and hit-and-run resulting in injury, according to the complaint.This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

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Hamilton Spectator
36 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
A teenager with a job making burritos became a powerful Minnesota lawmaker who trained service dogs
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Melissa Hortman' s influence at the Minnesota Capitol and her power as a Democratic leader to shape the course of a deeply divided Legislature were a far cry from her job as a teenager making chili-cheese burritos and overshadowed her volunteer work training service dogs for veterans. She was a lifelong Minneapolis-area resident who went to college in Boston and then returned home for law school and, with degree fresh in hand, worked as a volunteer lawyer for a group fighting housing discrimination. Elected to the Minnesota House in 2004, she helped pass liberal initiatives like free lunches for pubic school students in 2023 as the chamber's speaker. With the House split 67-67 between Democrats and Republicans this year, she helped break a budget impasse threatening to shut down state government. Tributes from friends and colleagues in both parties poured in after Hortman and her husband were shot to death early Saturday in their suburban Brooklyn Park home in what authorities called an act of targeted political violence. Helping Paws, which trains service dogs, posted a message on its Facebook page, along with a photo of a smiling Hortman with her arm around a friendly-looking golden retriever. 'Melissa Hortman was a woman that I wish everyone around the country knew,' U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a longtime friend and Democratic ally, said Sunday on ABC's 'This Week.' Klobuchar added: 'She was a true leader and loved her work, but was always so grounded and such a decent person. I think that's probably the best word to describe her. You look at her pictures and you know what she was about.' The shootings followed a big Democratic dinner The killings of Hortman and her husband early Saturday followed the shootings and wounding of another prominent Minnesota lawmaker, state Sen. John Hoffman, and his wife, at their home in Champlin, another Minneapolis suburb. Hoffman is chair of the Senate committee overseeing human resources spending. A nephew posted Sunday on Facebook that the Hoffmans were out of surgery and recovering from multiple gunshot wounds. The Hortmans, the Hoffmans and other top Democrats had gathered at a downtown Minneapolis hotel Friday night for their party's annual Humphrey-Mondale dinner. It's named for two Minnesota liberal icons who served both as U.S. senators and vice presidents, Hubert Humphrey and Walter Mondale. Minnesota Democrat and U.S. Sen. Tina Smith said she saw both lawmakers at the dinner. 'So it feels so personal, because we're all very good friends, of course, to have that have happened so shortly after we were all together,' Smith said on CNN's 'Inside Politics Sunday.' Outside the state Capitol in St. Paul, a memorial to Hortman and her husband included flowers, candles, small American flags and a photo of the couple. Visitors left messages on Post-It notes commending Hortman's legislative work, including, 'You changed countless lives.' Hortman supplied a key vote for a budget deal Democrats disliked Legislative colleagues described Hortman as funny, savvy and fiercely committed to liberal causes. When lawmakers convened in January with a vacancy in a Democratic seat in the House giving the GOP a temporary advantage, Hortman led a boycott of daily sessions for more than three weeks to force Republicans into a power-sharing arrangement. Republicans were intent this year on ending state health coverage for adult immigrants who entered the U.S. illegally, authorized in 2023 as part of a sweeping liberal program . Democrats wanted to keep it, and lawmakers began June — the last month of the 2025 budget year — without having passed a 2026-27 spending blueprint. Hortman helped negotiate a package that included a bill ending the state health coverage for adult immigrants on Jan. 1, 2026. She was the only House Democrat to vote for it last week— the 68th vote it needed to pass the chamber. She told reporters afterward that Republicans insisted on the bill, and Minnesota voters who gave the House an even partisan split expect the parties to compromise. But she acknowledged she worries about people who will lose their health insurance. 'I know that people will be hurt by that vote,' she said, choking up briefly before regaining her composure. 'We worked very hard to get a budget deal that wouldn't include that provision.' Tacos, auto parts, physics and Habitat for Humanity Hortman's earliest jobs didn't suggest that she'd become a power in Minnesota politics. The earliest job listed on her profile, when she was 16, was as a cook and cashier at a restaurant, where she made tacos and, 'most importantly, chili cheese burritos.' She also worked for caterers and was a runner at an auto parts store, putting inventory away and retrieving items for customers. Her husband, Mark, earned a physics degree from the University of North Carolina and later, a master's of business administration. He was the chief operating officer of an auto parts company for 10 years before co-founding a business consulting firm. He was active in Helping Paws and worked with homebuilding nonprofit Habitat for Humanity. Melissa Hortman earned a degree in philosophy and political science from Boston University, where she also worked as a residence assistant in one of its dormitories. She earned her law degree from the University of Minnesota, but also a master's of public administration from Harvard University. She served a decade on the board of a local nonprofit providing transportation and car repairs for low-income residents. She also was part of a committee in 2005 considering whether Minneapolis should submit a bid to host the Summer Olympics. 'We remember Melissa for her kindness, compassion, and unwavering commitment to making the world better,' Helping Paws said in its Facebook message. ___ Hanna reported from Topeka, Kansas. Associated Press video journalist Obed Lamy also contributed reporting from St. Paul, Minnesota. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .


San Francisco Chronicle
37 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
A teenager with a job making burritos became a powerful Minnesota lawmaker who trained service dogs
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Melissa Hortman' s influence at the Minnesota Capitol and her power as a Democratic leader to shape the course of a deeply divided Legislature were a far cry from her job as a teenager making chili-cheese burritos and overshadowed her volunteer work training service dogs for veterans. She was a lifelong Minneapolis-area resident who went to college in Boston and then returned home for law school and, with degree fresh in hand, worked as a volunteer lawyer for a group fighting housing discrimination. Elected to the Minnesota House in 2004, she helped pass liberal initiatives like free lunches for pubic school students in 2023 as the chamber's speaker. With the House split 67-67 between Democrats and Republicans this year, she helped break a budget impasse threatening to shut down state government. Tributes from friends and colleagues in both parties poured in after Hortman and her husband were shot to death early Saturday in their suburban Brooklyn Park home in what authorities called an act of targeted political violence. Helping Paws, which trains service dogs, posted a message on its Facebook page, along with a photo of a smiling Hortman with her arm around a friendly-looking golden retriever. 'Melissa Hortman was a woman that I wish everyone around the country knew,' U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a longtime friend and Democratic ally, said Sunday on ABC's 'This Week.' Klobuchar added: 'She was a true leader and loved her work, but was always so grounded and such a decent person. I think that's probably the best word to describe her. You look at her pictures and you know what she was about.' The shootings followed a big Democratic dinner The killings of Hortman and her husband early Saturday followed the shootings and wounding of another prominent Minnesota lawmaker, state Sen. John Hoffman, and his wife, at their home in Champlin, another Minneapolis suburb. Hoffman is chair of the Senate committee overseeing human resources spending. A nephew posted Sunday on Facebook that the Hoffmans were out of surgery and recovering from multiple gunshot wounds. The Hortmans, the Hoffmans and other top Democrats had gathered at a downtown Minneapolis hotel Friday night for their party's annual Humphrey-Mondale dinner. It's named for two Minnesota liberal icons who served both as U.S. senators and vice presidents, Hubert Humphrey and Walter Mondale. Minnesota Democrat and U.S. Sen. Tina Smith said she saw both lawmakers at the dinner. 'So it feels so personal, because we're all very good friends, of course, to have that have happened so shortly after we were all together,' Smith said on CNN's 'Inside Politics Sunday.' Outside the state Capitol in St. Paul, a memorial to Hortman and her husband included flowers, candles, small American flags and a photo of the couple. Visitors left messages on Post-It notes commending Hortman's legislative work, including, 'You changed countless lives." Hortman supplied a key vote for a budget deal Democrats disliked Legislative colleagues described Hortman as funny, savvy and fiercely committed to liberal causes. When lawmakers convened in January with a vacancy in a Democratic seat in the House giving the GOP a temporary advantage, Hortman led a boycott of daily sessions for more than three weeks to force Republicans into a power-sharing arrangement. Republicans were intent this year on ending state health coverage for adult immigrants who entered the U.S. illegally, authorized in 2023 as part of a sweeping liberal program. Democrats wanted to keep it, and lawmakers began June — the last month of the 2025 budget year — without having passed a 2026-27 spending blueprint. Hortman helped negotiate a package that included a bill ending the state health coverage for adult immigrants on Jan. 1, 2026. She was the only House Democrat to vote for it last week— the 68th vote it needed to pass the chamber. She told reporters afterward that Republicans insisted on the bill, and Minnesota voters who gave the House an even partisan split expect the parties to compromise. But she acknowledged she worries about people who will lose their health insurance. 'I know that people will be hurt by that vote,' she said, choking up briefly before regaining her composure. 'We worked very hard to get a budget deal that wouldn't include that provision.' Tacos, auto parts, physics and Habitat for Humanity Hortman's earliest jobs didn't suggest that she'd become a power in Minnesota politics. The earliest job listed on her profile, when she was 16, was as a cook and cashier at a restaurant, where she made tacos and, 'most importantly, chili cheese burritos.' She also worked for caterers and was a runner at an auto parts store, putting inventory away and retrieving items for customers. Her husband, Mark, earned a physics degree from the University of North Carolina and later, a master's of business administration. He was the chief operating officer of an auto parts company for 10 years before co-founding a business consulting firm. He was active in Helping Paws and worked with homebuilding nonprofit Habitat for Humanity. Melissa Hortman earned a degree in philosophy and political science from Boston University, where she also worked as a residence assistant in one of its dormitories. She earned her law degree from the University of Minnesota, but also a master's of public administration from Harvard University. She served a decade on the board of a local nonprofit providing transportation and car repairs for low-income residents. She also was part of a committee in 2005 considering whether Minneapolis should submit a bid to host the Summer Olympics. ___

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Strangers in the middle of a city: The John and Jane Does of L.A. General Medical Center
He had a buzz cut and brown eyes, a stubbly beard and a wrestler's build. He did not have a wallet or phone; he could not state his name. He arrived at Los Angeles General Medical Center one cloudy day this winter just as thousands of people do every year: alone and unknown. Some 130,000 people are brought each year to L.A. General's emergency room. Many are unconscious, incapacitated or too unwell to tell staff who they are. Nearly all these Jane and John Does are identified within 48 hours or so of admission. But every year, a few dozen elude social workers' determined efforts to figure out who they are. Too sick to be discharged yet lacking the identification they need to be transferred to a more appropriate facility, they stay at L.A.'s busiest trauma hospital for weeks. Sometimes months. Occasionally years. That's an outcome no one wants. And so hospital staff did for the buzz cut man what they do once every other possibility is exhausted. Social workers cobbled together the tiny bit of information they could legally share: his height and weight, his estimated age, his date of admission, the place where he was found. They stood over his hospital bed and took his photograph. Then they asked the 10 million people of Los Angeles County: Does anyone know who this is? Just before 8 a.m. on Feb. 16, paramedics responded to a medical emergency at 1037 N. Vermont Ave. The man was face-down on a stretch of sidewalk lined with chain-link fences and sandbags, near a public restroom and the entrance to the Vermont/Santa Monica subway stop. Pink scrape marks blossomed above and below his right eye. Paramedics estimated he was about 30 years old. Hospital staff guessed 35 to 40. He had no possessions that might offer clues: no phone, no wallet, no tickets or receipts crumpled in his pockets. He could not state his name or answer any questions. The hospital admitted him under a name the English-speaking world has used for centuries when a legal name can't be verified: John Doe. The vast majority of patients admitted as John Does leave as themselves. The unconscious wake up. The intoxicated sober up. Frantic relatives call the hospital looking for a missing loved one, or police arrive seeking their suspect. None of these things happened for the man from North Vermont. When he finally opened his eyes, his language was minimal: a few indistinct words — possibly English, possibly Spanish — and nothing that sounded like a name. Social workers wrote down everything they knew for sure about their patient: his height (4 feet, 10 inches), his weight (181 pounds), the color of his eyes (dark brown). Then they started following the trail that typically leads to identification. The ambulance crew didn't recognize him, and the run sheet — the document paramedics use to record patients' condition and care — had no revelatory details. They checked Google Maps. Any nearby shelter whose manager they could call to ask about a missing resident? Nope. Was there an apartment building whose residents might recognize his photo? Nothing. They clicked through county databases. His details didn't align with any previously admitted hospital patient, or anyone in the mental health system. No missing-persons report matched his description; social workers couldn't find a mention of someone like him in any social media posts. An anonymous patient is an administrative problem. It's also a safety concern. If a patient can't state their name, they probably also can't say if they have life-threatening allergies or are taking any medications, said Dr. Chase Coffey, who oversees the hospital's social work team. 'We do our darndest to deliver safe, effective, high-quality care in these scenarios, but we run into limits there,' he said. Federal law requires hospitals to guard patient privacy zealously, and L.A. General is no exception. But given that virtually every hospital deals with unnamed patients, California carves out an exception for unidentified people who can't make their own healthcare decisions. In such instances, hospitals can go public with information that could locate their patient's next of kin. On March 3, nearly two weeks after the man's arrival, a press release went live on the county's website and pinged in the inboxes of reporters across the region. 'Los Angeles General Medical Center, a public hospital run by the L.A. County Department of Health Services, is seeking the media and public's help in identifying a patient,' the flier said. In the photograph the man gazed up from his hospital bed, eyes fixed somewhere past the camera, looking as lost as could be. The buzz cut man from North Vermont was not the only Doe in the hospital's care. On the same March 3 morning, the county asked for help identifying a wisp-thin elderly man with a grizzled beard and swollen black eye who'd been found in Monterey Park's Edison Trails Park. Three days later, it sent out a bulletin for a gray-haired Jane Doe picked up near Echo Park Lake. In her photo she was unconscious and intubated, a bruise forming on her forehead, wires curling around her. By the end of the month, L.A. General would ask the public to identify four more men and women found alone in parks and on streets across the county, people whose cognitive state or medical condition left them unable to speak for themselves. All of the hospital's Does are found in L.A. County. That doesn't mean they live here. L.A. General is 2 miles from Union Station, where buses and trains deposit people traveling from all over North America. A few years ago, Coffey and social work supervisor Jose Hernandez found themselves trying to place an elderly couple from Nevada, both suffering from cognitive decline, who arrived at the station and couldn't recall who they were or where they meant to go. Fingerprinting is rarely an option. The federal fingerprint database can be accessed only for patients who are dying or are the subject of a police investigation, hospital staff said. Even if those criteria are met, the database will only yield a name if the person's fingerprints are already in the system. And even that's not always enough. Late last year, law enforcement ran the prints of an unidentified female patient who had been involved in a police incident. The system returned a name — one the patient adamantly insisted was not hers. 'Now the question is, is she confused? Do we have the wrong fingerprints-to-name match? Is there a mismatch? Is there a person using a different identity?' said Coffey. 'Now what do we do?' In end-of-the-rope scenarios such as this, the hospital turns to the public. The press releases are carefully phrased. The hospital can disclose just enough information to make the patient recognizable to those who know them, but not a word more. Federal laws forbid references to the patient's mental health, substance use, developmental disability or HIV status. The releases are posted on the county's website and social media channels. Local media outlets often publicize them further. In 'the best outcome that we get, we send [the notice] out and we get a hit within a couple of days. We start getting calls from the community saying, 'Oh, we know who this patient is,'' Hernandez said. About 50% of releases lead to such positive outcomes. For the other half of patients, the chance of being named gets a little smaller with every day that the phone doesn't ring. 'If we don't know who you are after a month, that's when it becomes decreasingly likely that we're going to figure it out,' said Dr. Brad Spellberg, the hospital's chief medical officer. On April 9, nearly two months after the buzz cut man's arrival at L.A. General, the hospital sent out a second release about him. His scrapes had healed. His black hair was longer. His stubble had grown into a wispy beard. 'Patient occasionally mentions that he lives on 41st Street and Walton Avenue,' the release said. 'Primarily Spanish speaking.' But he still had no name. It is possible for a person in this situation to be stuck at L.A. General for the rest of their lives. One man hit by a car on Santa Monica Boulevard in January 2017 lived for nearly two years with a traumatic brain injury before dying unidentified in the hospital. As of late 2024, a few Does had been there for more than a year. If a patient has no identity, L.A. General can't figure out who insures them. And in the U.S. healthcare system, not having a guarantee of payment is almost worse than not having a name. Skilled nursing facilities, group homes and rehabilitation centers won't take people who don't have anyone to pay for them, Spellberg said. The county Public Guardian serves as a conservator for vulnerable disabled residents, but can't accept nameless cases. Unless a patient recovers sufficiently to check themselves out, they are stuck in a lose-lose scenario. They can't be discharged from L.A. General, whose 600 beds are desperately needed by the county's most critically ill and injured, but also can't move on to a facility that provides the care they need. 'We're the busiest trauma center west of Texas in the United States,' Spellberg said. 'If our bed is taken up by someone who really doesn't need to be in the [trauma] hospital but can't leave ... that's a bed that's not available for other patients who need it.' L.A. General is staffed to handle crises, not long-term care of people with dementia or traumatic brain injuries. Bedbound patients could get pressure sores if they aren't turned frequently enough. Mobile patients could wander the hospital's corridors, or fall and injure themselves. 'You're trapping the patient in the wrong care environment,' Spellberg said. 'They literally become a hostage in the hospital, for months to years.' The man found in Edison Trails Park eventually left the hospital. So did the gray-haired woman, whose name was at last confirmed. The man from North Vermont is still at L.A. General, his identity as much a mystery as the day he arrived four months ago. The Does keep coming: An elderly man found near Seventh and Flower streets. A young man found near railroad tracks. A man with burn injuries and a graying beard; another unconscious and badly bruised. All sick or injured, all separated from their names, all their futures riding on a single question: Does anyone know who this is? If you have information about an individual pictured here, contact L.A. General's Social Work Department from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at (323) 409-5253. Outside of those hours, call the Department of Emergency Medicine's Social Work Department at (323) 409-6883. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.