California Contract Cities Association street racing press conference. (Photo: CCCA)
Grieving Parents and City Leaders Press Sacramento to Act on Deadly Street Racing
Street racing and takeovers are not spontaneous teenage mistakes
By Hector Barajas, January 14, 2026 4:00 am
The 2026 legislative session began with grieving families and local elected officials standing in the Capitol, describing lives lost to street racing and street takeovers. What remains uncertain is whether the Legislature will take meaningful action to stop the next death.
At the State Capitol, the California Contract Cities Association (CCCA) stood alongside mothers, aunts, and advocates who have buried loved ones killed by illegal street racing and street takeovers.
One mother described preparing her daughter for burial when she should have been planning a wedding. She did her daughter’s makeup for a funeral, not for a future stolen at 100 miles per hour on a residential street. No statistic can soften that reality. No press release can absorb that pain.
The message these families delivered is that these stories should haunt every lawmaker who still treats street racing as a nuisance rather than what it is: organized, repeated, and lethal violence.
From the CCCA Press Release: “Over the past several years, Los Angeles County law enforcement agencies have documented more than 1,000 street takeover events in roughly an 18-month period, underscoring the scale and persistence of the problem. Statewide data further links street racing and takeover activity to 264 crashes, 124 serious injuries, and at least 30 fatalities.”
Street racing and takeovers are not spontaneous teenage mistakes. They are coordinated through social media, cross city lines in minutes, and are driven by a small group of repeat offenders who know the system is weak and fragmented.
Local elected officials told the Legislature that cities are left to clean up the bloodshed, shattered families, and devastated neighborhoods after the fact.
California has the data and the technology. What city leaders are asking for is help from the State Legislature to hold the most dangerous offenders accountable before another family is shattered.
These city leaders are asking that repeat offenders and organizers face serious penalties that actually deter behavior, not symbolic slaps on the wrist. Vehicles used in street racing should be seized. Organizers should be charged. Habitual extreme speeders should face escalating consequences that remove their ability to kill.
CCCA is calling on the State Legislature and the Governor to advance a comprehensive, statewide framework that includes:
- Stronger accountability for repeat offenders and organizers who coordinate illegal racing and takeovers;
- Technology-enabled prevention tools that reduce the ability of high-risk repeat offenders to drive at deadly speeds and help identify dangerous patterns before tragedy occurs;
- Targeted state investment in prevention infrastructure, including intersection hardening, traffic-calming measures, rapid repair funding, and data-driven hotspot mitigation.
The parents and city leaders reminded the state legislature that every delay guarantees another mother standing at a podium describing the unthinkable and another child growing up without a parent.
Here is the LINK to the press conference.
- Grieving Parents and City Leaders Press Sacramento to Act on Deadly Street Racing - January 14, 2026
- California’s Higher Gas Prices Are a Policy Choice, Not an Accident - January 7, 2026
- Americans Haven’t Stopped Caring – They’ve Stopped Trusting - January 5, 2026




“Vehicles used in street racing should be seized. Organizers should be charged.” Duh? Why create even more laws when you don’t enforce the current ones. Let’s see if Sacramento can break the record of 1,000 new laws per year that are unenforceable.
Enforce the existing laws. What are your DAs doing? What are the police doing? The people just seem to be asking for more money from the taxpayers and create a bigger nanny state versus enforcing laws and having the offenders held responsible for their criminal behavior. Money doesn’t solve the problem, consequences do.
They won’t do a thing unless it’s tied to an NGO and some money is funneled to their “non-profit”.