Police briefs
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A man who was hit by a car last month has died as a result of injuries
sustained from that accident.
Huntington Beach resident Mark De La Fuente, 55, died last Thursday at
approximately 7 p.m. at Orange Coast Memorial Hospital, one month after
allegedly being hit by a car driven by Lisa Terese Piho at the
intersection of Warner Avenue and Graham Street.
The July 15 traffic collision involved three cars. At the time of the
collision, De La Fuente, a pedestrian, sustained serious injuries and was
taken to UCI Medical Center.
The Huntington Beach Police Department said that the investigation is
ongoing; however, investigators say they believe that the vehicle driven
by Piho, also of Huntington Beach, failed to stop at a red traffic signal
westbound at Warner and Graham.
At the conclusion of the investigation, officials said, the police
department will be submitting the case to the Orange County District
Attorney’s office for review and possible criminal proceedings.
De La Fuente was walking his dog south on Graham and crossing Warner
at 8:15 a.m. on July 15 when a 1998 silver Mitsubishi Eclipse heading
west on Warner allegedly ran a red light and was broadsided by a red 1995
Honda Civic, police said. The crash caused the driver of the Mitsubishi,
Piho, to lose control and careen into De La Fuente, Officer Bob Barr
said.
The Eclipse continued to skid sideways after hitting De La Fuente. It
hit the rear left side of a black 1993 Honda Civic before finally coming
to rest west of the intersection, Barr said.
The dog also was injured but has recovered.
The driver of the red Honda Civic, 37-year-old Huntington Beach
resident Sharon Hall, was treated and released from Hoag Memorial
Hospital Presbyterian with minor injuries, including whiplash. The driver
of the black Civic, Bethany Holder, 24, also of Huntington Beach, was not
injured.
Neighborhood Preservation Program launched in Surf City
The Huntington Beach City Council has launched a Neighborhood
Preservation Program to preserve and improve multifamily and
single-family neighborhoods and reduce the need to police and code
enforcement.
The new program also is meant to eliminate blight within residential
neighborhoods and help residents establish housing community groups to
define and resolve neighborhood problems.
“I don’t like to change the character of a neighborhood, but prefer to
work with people directly to improve the quality of their lives,” said
Bill Zylla, who became the city’s first-ever Neighborhood Preservation
Program manager on Aug. 13.
Zylla previously served as neighborhood services manager for Chino
Hills and as public safety manager for Temple City.
The Neighborhood Preservation Program is being designed to incorporate
the city’s existing services such as code enforcement, infrastructure
improvements and the Community Development Block Grant Program together
to preserve the city’s housing stock.
“By coordinating all of the wide range of important city services with
a number of valuable resources available to them, we hope residents
throughout Huntington Beach will benefit from the Neighborhood
Preservation Program,” Planning Director Howard Zelefsky said.
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