Motorcyclist Killed in Florin Road Hit-and-Run After Illegal U-Turn in South Sacramento
The California Highway Patrol said a motorcyclist died Memorial Day evening after a driver in a 2018 bright blue Nissan Maxima made an illegal U-turn on Florin Road and pulled directly into the rider's path near Power Inn Road. The Sacramento County Coroner identified the rider as Omari Alain Truth Kashaka, 41. The Maxima driver fled the scene southbound on Power Inn, and as of May 27 no arrest has been announced.
Incident Summary
Crash Area
What CHP and Local Reporting Say Happened
According to the California Highway Patrol's South Sacramento office and reporting from CBS Sacramento, FOX40, ABC10, and AOL News, a motorcyclist was riding eastbound on Florin Road in south Sacramento at approximately 6:29 p.m. on Monday, May 25, 2026, the Memorial Day holiday. CHP investigators said a 2018 bright blue Nissan Maxima was traveling southbound on Power Inn Road, turned westbound onto Florin Road, and then used a turnout to attempt an illegal U-turn back onto eastbound Florin. The Maxima pulled directly into the path of the oncoming motorcycle in front of 7894 Florin Road.
The rider was pinned beneath his motorcycle after the collision. Emergency responders freed him from the wreckage, and he was transported to a local hospital, where he later died. The Sacramento County Coroner identified the rider as Omari Alain Truth Kashaka, 41.
The driver of the Nissan did not stop. CHP said the suspect vehicle fled southbound on Power Inn Road after the collision and remained outstanding as of the most recent updates from local news outlets. Investigators told the public the Maxima is expected to show significant broadside damage to the passenger side, along with a deployed passenger-side airbag. CHP South Sacramento, the Sacramento Police Department, and the Sacramento County Sheriff's Office are coordinating the search and are asking anyone with information to come forward.
Why an Illegal U-Turn Across Oncoming Traffic Is So Dangerous
California Vehicle Code section 22100.5 prohibits U-turns where they are restricted by signs or controlled-access designs, and California Vehicle Code section 22105 forbids any U-turn that cannot be completed in safety, including any maneuver that interferes with oncoming traffic. The basic legal rule is straightforward. A driver making a U-turn does not have the right of way against vehicles that are already traveling lawfully in the lane the driver is turning into.
When the oncoming vehicle is a motorcycle, the consequences of misjudging that gap escalate fast. A passenger car or SUV that crosses or U-turns in front of a motorcyclist often does not register the rider in time, especially at dusk or in mixed traffic, and especially when the driver is focused on completing the maneuver rather than scanning for smaller silhouettes. Riders have almost no crumple zone, no airbags, and no second chance to brake. The motorcyclist absorbs nearly all of the kinetic energy from the impact, and pinning under the bike is a frequent outcome.
For families pursuing a civil case, the U-turn dynamic usually carries strong liability weight. The maneuver is documented in the police report, the physical evidence on both vehicles tends to confirm it, and California courts have long recognized that a left-turning or U-turning driver carries the burden of proving the turn was safe.
How Fleeing the Scene Changes the Legal Picture
A driver who causes a fatal collision and then drives away faces a separate, far heavier criminal exposure under California Vehicle Code section 20001. Felony hit-and-run causing death is punishable by up to four years in state prison and a fine of up to $10,000, in addition to whatever vehicular manslaughter or related charges may follow once the driver is identified. The flight itself is treated as a distinct crime, regardless of who was at fault for the underlying crash.
That criminal exposure casts a direct shadow on the civil side. When a suspect is identified and charged, the criminal record can support a civil claim for punitive damages under California Civil Code section 3294, which authorizes punitive awards on proof by clear and convincing evidence of malice, oppression, or fraud. California courts have repeatedly recognized that fleeing a scene where someone has been seriously injured or killed, knowing the victim is hurt and leaving them behind, can satisfy the malice standard.
For the family, the criminal case and the civil case can run on parallel tracks. A guilty plea or conviction in the criminal case can sometimes be used in the civil case under the doctrine of collateral estoppel, which prevents a defendant who has already been convicted from relitigating the same facts in a separate civil proceeding. That can speed up the liability phase of a civil claim and shift the focus to the value of the damages.
Families dealing with the aftermath of a fatal motorcycle hit-and-run often consult a motorcycle accident lawyer, a wrongful death lawyer, or a car accident lawyer to understand how those tracks fit together.
Why Insurance Coverage Still Matters Even Before an Arrest
When a suspect vehicle is still outstanding, families often assume the civil track has to wait for an arrest. That is not always the case. California's uninsured motorist (UM) and underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage rules let the family of a deceased motorcyclist file a claim against the rider's own motorcycle insurance policy when the at-fault driver cannot be identified, cannot be located, or carried insufficient coverage. UM coverage is required to be offered with every California auto and motorcycle policy and is automatically included unless the insured rejected it in writing.
A hit-and-run by an unidentified driver is the textbook UM claim. The insurance carrier effectively steps into the shoes of the absent driver and pays the family up to the policy's limits. That can include compensation for funeral and burial expenses, the loss of financial support, the loss of love and companionship, and other wrongful death damages that California recognizes.
If the Nissan Maxima driver is identified later, civil counsel can pivot to a third-party claim against that driver's auto liability policy, and any prior UM payout typically carries subrogation rights that follow the case. Identification, then, opens up additional coverage. It is not, however, a prerequisite to opening the civil case.
Evidence Preservation in a Hit-and-Run Investigation
Hit-and-run cases live on physical evidence and witness testimony that can vanish in days. Surveillance video from businesses along Florin Road and Power Inn Road tends to overwrite on a rolling seven to thirty day cycle. Cell phone video from witnesses can be lost when phones are replaced or storage fills up. Body shop records for a 2018 bright blue Nissan Maxima with broadside passenger damage and a deployed airbag have a narrow window before the car is repaired, parted out, or quietly disposed of.
CHP has asked anyone with information to come forward, including anyone who may have seen the suspect vehicle in the area before or after the collision, or anyone with dashcam footage from eastbound Florin Road or southbound Power Inn Road on the evening of Memorial Day. Tips can be directed to the CHP South Sacramento Area office.
On the civil side, counsel for the family will often issue formal preservation letters to nearby businesses, public works departments, and any rideshare or delivery companies whose drivers may have been in the area. Those letters put recipients on notice that video, GPS, and timestamp data tied to the crash window should not be deleted while the investigation continues.
What Families Can Do in the First Days
For the family of any rider killed in a sudden collision, the practical steps in the first week often shape every legal option that follows. Requesting and reviewing the formal CHP traffic collision report, securing the motorcycle and the rider's gear from the tow yard before they are disposed of, photographing the scene if possible, and locating any witnesses identified in the report all matter. Insurance carriers, including the rider's own motorcycle policy, will often reach out within days. Recorded statements given before counsel reviews the case can box in the family's later options, so a measured response is usually the safer one.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Hit-and-run evidence can disappear in days. Surveillance video, body shop records, and dashcam footage are often the difference between a strong civil case and a closed file.
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