Teen accused in deadly hit-and-run deemed a danger to others, as police arrest 3rd suspect
- Two teenage boys have been charged with murder after hitting and killing 63-year-old Scott Dwight Habermehl while he biked to work on May 29, 2024, according to the Albuquerque Police Department.
- The 13-year-old is believed to have been driving the stolen car, while the 11-year-old was a passenger and waved a handgun, according to police statements.
- A video captured the incident, showing the 13-year-old driver and the 11-year-old passenger laughing as they hit Habermehl, according to police reports.
44 Articles
44 Articles
Boys (11, 15, 17) drove cyclists dead
On his way to work in the early hours of the morning, Scott Habermehl was hit by a car on his bike in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on May 29, 2024 and died. Now it turned out that it was not an accident, but the act of three boys aged 11, 13 and 15. She betrayed her own mobile video. With "Ram him simply, brother", one of the boys calls the handlebar to action. The police arrested the alleged driver and two co-drivers for suspicion of murder. The sh…
Arrest warrant had been issued for 11-year-old before deadly hit-and-run, police say
By T.J. Wilham Click here for updates on this story ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico (KOAT) — Albuquerque police officers were searching for an 11-year-old boy at the time he and two teenagers intentionally ran over a man who was riding his bike to work, court records show. It was a crime that was captured on video and shared on social media. The incident resulted in the death of Scott Dwight Habermehl, 63, who was cycling to his job at Sandia Labs w…
Video shows teens target bicyclist in deadly hit-and-run
Authorities in Albuquerque, New Mexico, have charged a now 13-year-old boy with murder, alleging that he was the driver in a deliberate hit-and-run that targeted a bicyclist on his way to work. Officials say a video posted to social media shows the boy, along with two other teens, intentionally hitting 63-year-old physicist Scott Dwight Habermehl with a car.
APD: Habermehl hit-and-run may be tied to social media trend
Albuquerque police Chief Harold Medina said he was "alarmed" to learn of a homicide near Las Vegas, Nevada, with details "very similar" to the fatal hit-and-run of a Sandia Labs employee last year.
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