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Street Racer Cries for His Mommy After High-Speed Chase

admin79 by admin79
January 16, 2026
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Street Racer Cries for His Mommy After High-Speed Chase

‘I want to call my mom!’ Man arrested for drag racing cries for his mom

By KVIA ABC-7followFollow “” to receive notifications about new pages on “”.

ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (KVIA) — Bernalillo County Sheriff deputies arrested Fernando Martinez, 22, after a drag racing operation near the Isleta Amphitheater. While sitting in a deputy’s car after his arrest, Martinez broke into tears and said “I want to call my mom!”

“Vehicles were racing through the parking lot, weaving in and out of traffic on University Boulevard, and putting families at risk while attending a soccer game in the area,” the Sheriff’s Office posted on social media. “One driver in a white Chrysler 300 stood out. When deputies attempted a traffic stop, the driver fled at high speeds, ran red lights, passed in oncoming lanes, and continued endangering the public throughout Southeast Albuquerque.”

Watch the full video above.

Martinez was arrested for reckless driving, resisting, and aggravated fleeing from a law enforcement officer. Deputies also report finding a gun in his car.

“We are sharing this video to highlight just how dangerous this behavior is and to remind our community that this will not be tolerated,” the Sheriff’s Office posted on social media. “BCSO will continue to use every resource available to identify, track, and stop these offenders. Adults in our custody are also not allowed to call their moms until they get to jail.”

“I want my mom!”: Grown street racer cries, begs for mom after being busted by BCSO

Watch the pursuit and arrest online

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Bernalillo County Sheriff's Department
Street racer cries for his mom after being busted by BCSO / BCSO

Bernalillo County Sheriff’s deputies responded to reports of an illegal street race near the Isleta Amphitheater on Aug. 3. When one racer tried to make a hasty getaway, BCSO used a law enforcement helicopter to track him offender more than 12 minutes through local streets in southeast Albuquerque until he hit a dead end in the San Jose neighborhood.

Deputies on patrol quickly surrounded him and made the arrest but his reaction was not what they expected from a macho muscle car driver who just spent almost 15 minutes driving dangerously to evade arrest.

Handcuffed in the back of a patrol car, the 22-year old driver breaks down in tears and begs deputies for the chance to call him mom.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=lK7FbwfTJAg%3Ffeature%3Doembed

He was arrested for reckless driving, resisting, and aggravated fleeing from a law enforcement officer, according to BCSO. Deputies say a firearm was also found in the vehicle.

The Sheriff’s Department shared this statement about the incident: “Street racing is plaguing our city and endangering the lives of innocent people. These operations are part of BCSO’s continued commitment to safeguard the citizens of Bernalillo County… We are sharing this video to highlight just how dangerous this behavior is and to remind our community that this will not be tolerated. BCSO will continue to use every resource available to identify, track, and stop these offenders.”

“Adults in our custody are also not allowed to call their moms until they get to jail,” BCSO added.

Street racing in California only getting more brazen, and more dangerous

Races can draw in crowds to street corners converted to speedways.

ByJohn Kapetaneas, Stephanie Lorenzo, and Allie Yang

April 29, 2021, 2:19 AM

8:32

The deadly side of LA’s high-speed car culture Reckless drivers in high-performance cars have made city streets dangerous. Monique Munoz’s family discusses her death after a teen crashed a Lamborghini into her car at over 100 miles per hour.

ABC

For decades, California and car culture have gone hand-in-hand. Illegal races offer the chance to drive cars fast, burn rubber and get a rush of adrenaline, but it’s a lifestyle steeped in risk and recklessness. The slightest mistake can be deadly.

Sgt. Michael Downing of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department knows that risk all too well. He has spent his 17-year career patrolling LA’s streets.

“It seems lately, almost every weekend or every couple of weeks, we have a fatality somewhere in the county that’s related to street racing,” he said. “You see on the freeway, all the time, the high speeds and they crash into somebody who’s going slower or [an] innocent party on the freeway gets killed.”

Watch “Nightline” weeknights at 12:35 a.m. ET on ABC

Downing says racers believe they can get away with it and, because of the limited resources police have, it’s difficult to crack down.

The “City of Angels” is built around driving. But the same roads that make everyday life here possible for residents can also make living there treacherous.

Monique Munoz, 32, worked as a clinical receptionist at University of California, Los Angeles. But shortly after 5 p.m. on Feb. 17, 2021, she was driving home from work when she crossed the busy corner of Olympic Boulevard and Overland Avenue, and a 17-year-old boy driving a Lamborghini SUV worth more than $200,000 slammed into her Lexus sedan at what police say was over 100 miles per hour.

Monique Munoz, 32, was killed in a high-speed crash on her way home from work.ABC

Although there was no evidence the teen was in a street race, authorities say the high-speed crash mangled Munoz’s car and she died at the scene.

“We could not believe Monique was gone,” said Richard Cartier, Munoz’s uncle and godfather. “This was so devastating to us … to the family.”

When police arrived at the family’s home later that day, Carol and Isaac Cardona were thrown into every parent’s worst nightmare.

MORE: 17-year-old Lamborghini driver admits to vehicular manslaughter in fatal LA car crash

“He pulls her license from his top-left pocket, puts it on the table and pushes it toward me and my wife, and says, ‘Sorry to be the one to have to tell you this, but your daughter was killed in a car accident,’” Isaac Cardona, Munoz’s stepfather, said.

Carol and Isaac Cardona lost their daughter Monique Munoz.ABC

“The hardest thing for me was I didn’t get to go shopping with her for a wedding dress,” said Carol Cardona, Munoz’s mother. “Instead, I had to find an outfit for her to be buried in.”

After her tragic death, family and friends came together to pressure the LA District Attorney to file charges against the teen.

“We have this responsibility to Monique to give her a voice, to speak for her, to give her justice… We’re just going to keep fighting,” Stephanie Crespin, Munoz’s cousin, said at a rally in March.

“I want him to do 50 years, because I never want him to forget,” Richard Cartier, Munoz’s uncle and godfather, said.ABC

Isaac Cardona remains infuriated at what he calls the senselessness of Munoz’s death.

“It was avoidable. There was no reason for this to happen.” he said.

The teen driver’s father, multimillionaire entrepreneur James Khuri, apologized for the family’s loss.

“I am very, very sorry, and no words can say how sorry I am because those are just words,” Khuri said.

Richard Cartier, Munoz’s uncle and godfather, rejected the apology.

MORE: 6 dead in Georgia after passenger van crashes, bursts into flames

“[An] apology is when you bump into somebody, and you say, ‘I apologize. Oh, excuse me,’” he said. “This is murder. You can’t apologize for a human life.”

The DA’s office charged the teen with felony vehicular manslaughter nearly two months after the crash. The teen admitted to the charge in juvenile court last week, which is the equivalent of a guilty plea.

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“I want him to do 50 years, because I never want him to forget,” Cartier said.

Carol and Isaac Cardona are living every parent’s worst nightmare.ABC

He’s now under house arrest and awaiting sentencing at the end of June 2021. His lawyer has released a statement saying he anticipates the teen will receive either probation or up to about nine months in a juvenile facility. The most severe penalty for the charge in the state of California is six years.

For racing fans, the scene can be intoxicating. Hundreds of people gather at night for so called “takeovers,” when street corners are converted into speedways and tricked-out vehicles perform in outlawed street races. The takeovers were made infamous in films like “The Fast and the Furious.”

But in the real world, these streets are where everyday families live. Drivers perform dangerous stunts — including burnouts and doughnuts — in front of spectators while also endangering residents.

“On a weekly basis, we have street racing or street takeovers, where they’ll block intersections causing problems for the community,” Downing said. “People trying to drive through the roads are blocked due to street takeovers. They result in traffic collisions and, unfortunately, fatal traffic collisions.”

Downing, who has seen these races during his nearly two-decade career, says the situation has “gotten a lot worse.”

Sgt. Michael Downing of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has spent his 17-year career patrolling LA’s streets.ABC

“When I first started, it was simple street racing. The cars would go out — 100, 200 cars — they do a couple races on a closed off street and then leave,” he said. But now they’ve become more aggressive. “They’re more combative towards law enforcement [and] to the public, where they take over an intersection and block the road. [If] police officers try and come in, they will smash the patrol cars as they come in. I’ve seen where they jump on fire trucks [when] the fire department is trying to get through, and … there’s no respect anymore for law enforcement or for the public from these groups.”

One LA resident who did not want to share her name provided ABC News with video of a takeover from just outside her front door.

MORE: Federal agencies to probe explosive Tesla crash that killed 2 in Texas

“Practically every weekend there’s burnouts, there’s people racing,” she said. “It’s very scary, they can even hit a house. They could hit an animal, child [or] pedestrian.”

Drivers leverage Instagram and Twitter to gather crowds and cultivate clout, Downing says.

“Social media is where they get their fan base for it and spectators,” Downing said. “But social media has also helped us because we all follow. So we keep track of the social media posts. We reach out on social media for information. If there’s a major crash, a fatality, we reach out to those people posting those videos to get our information and help out with our investigation.”

In this world, fast cars equal prestige.

“You see a lot more of the muscle cars out for takeovers in street racing,” Downing said. “You’ll see some of the higher-end cars that are more in like north LA County or LA City, like Lamborghinis, Ferraris, Maseratis.”

Former street racer Corey Smith was practically born in this world. He learned to drive when he was 11 and started racing at 12. Once addicted to those high speeds, he has since resigned from that life to focus on his Rialto, California, auto body shop.

Former street racer Corey Smith was practically born in this world. He learned to drive when he was 11 and started racing at 12.ABC

“I pretty much gave it up. The cars now [are] extremely fast on the street — very dangerous. It’s wild. Too much to lose,” he said. “It’s a drug you have to wean yourself off of. You gotta figure out right and wrong.”

But the high-stakes game of life and death hasn’t kept Eric Reece from getting behind the starting line. Just this past weekend, he raced four times.

“if you’re at a street race, you can’t get mad if you get killed or go to jail,” Reece said. “You might get killed, your car might get wrecked, you might go to jail. That’s the bottom line. If you don’t want that, stay in [the] house.”

While many continue to live life on the edge, others are left to pick up the pieces. For Munoz’s family, the intersection where she died serves as a permanent and vivid reminder of their daughter, who lost her life in a high-speed crash.

“I’m sickened… I’m disgusted. I cry every day. I can’t sleep,” Cartier, Munoz’s uncle, said.

Carol and Isaac Cardona lost their daughter Monique Munoz.ABC

For them, justice can’t come any sooner. The guilty plea is a small victory but not enough to ease their pain.

“Justice to me would have him testify[ing] in … the adult court and being prosecuted as an adult,” Cartier said.

The family now faces a long road ahead to healing.

“We don’t think we can ever move forward, ever,” Cartier said. “We are all in a dark place. In order for us to move forward, bring back Monique.”

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