A man is facing vehicular manslaughter, assault and DUI charges for allegedly ramming a sheriff’s car during a traffic stop and leading deputies on a pursuit that ended with a fiery crash in the Fairfax District that killed a chef on his way home from work.
Alex Lopez, 28, pleaded not guilty Thursday to one count each of gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated, assault on a peace officer and fleeing a pursuing peace officer’s vehicle and two counts of DUI causing injury, according to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.
The crash occurred around 10:30 p.m. Tuesday near Fairfax Avenue and Third Street when the driver of a silver sedan being chased by deputies crashed into a blue SUV that ended up on a sidewalk, pinned between a tree and a building, killing Jeeves Tangonan, 37, of Los Angeles.
Earlier this week, Sheriff Alex Villanueva said a deputy had pulled the suspect over for a traffic stop, and that the suspect was believed to be under the influence of alcohol or drugs.
The defendant, who was driving a gray Chevrolet Malibu, had been “lane straddling and driving without headlights on during time of darkness,” according to a sheriff’s department statement.
“The person stopped and the deputy got out of his vehicle, made contact with the driver,” Villanueva said. “Then the driver struck the (deputy’s) vehicle and drove away and fled the scene. That’s where the pursuit initiated. And sadly when the suspect fled … later on down the road there was a fatal traffic (collision).
“Our condolences to the victim’s family,” he said. “My heart goes out to them, because this person appeared to be under the influence. There was definitely impairment. So we’re going through all of our investigative process.”
The deputy who was involved in the initial traffic stop was taken to a hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries, as was the suspect, the sheriff’s department reported.
Lopez is jailed in lieu of $205,000 bail while awaiting his next court appearance April 29.
The victim was a chef at a West Hollywood hotel.
“He treated my sister perfect, he was the perfect husband, the perfect son, the perfect brother-in-law to me,” his brother-in-law, Marlon Chavez, told CBS2 Wednesday. “I do want justice to be served for this man, to pay for what he did. I’ve never seen my sister and my family go through so much pain.”