Two Tesla Passengers Killed When Stolen Hyundai Fleeing Elk Grove Police Runs Red Light
Elk Grove Police say a stolen silver Hyundai driven by a 14-year-old boy fleeing an attempted traffic stop ran a red light at Brown Road and Elk Grove Florin Road early Monday and broadsided a Tesla carrying four people. The Sacramento County Coroner identified the two rear passengers killed as Skip Van, 54, and Tiffany Chu, 47. The Tesla driver, a 55-year-old woman, was left with life-threatening injuries, and a 63-year-old front passenger was hospitalized. Crash debris tore through a fence and a vehicle came to rest in a family's backyard.
Incident Summary
Crash Area
What Elk Grove Police Say Happened
According to the Elk Grove Police Department and reporting from ABC10, an officer near Rau Park heard a vehicle being driven recklessly around 4:00 a.m. on Monday, June 1, 2026, and spotted a silver Hyundai on Elk Grove Florin Road. The officer activated overhead emergency lights to make a traffic stop. Rather than pull over, the Hyundai fled, cutting through a gas station lot onto Brown Road and making a series of evasive maneuvers that included a U-turn over a sidewalk.
Police say the Hyundai then accelerated westbound on Brown Road and ran the red light at Brown Road and Elk Grove Florin Road, where it broadsided a Tesla that was traveling southbound through the intersection. The force of the impact sent crash debris through a fence, and one of the vehicles came to rest in a family's backyard. Investigators said the officer was at least a quarter mile behind the Hyundai at the moment of impact.
The Tesla was carrying four people. The Sacramento County Coroner identified the two rear-seat passengers who were killed as Skip Van, a 54-year-old man, and Tiffany Chu, a 47-year-old woman. The Tesla driver, a 55-year-old woman, was transported with life-threatening injuries. A 63-year-old man in the front passenger seat was hospitalized with injuries that were not considered life-threatening.
Police say the Hyundai was being driven by a 14-year-old boy. The car had been stolen from Sacramento, and the theft had not yet been reported at the time of the crash. The 14-year-old was detained at the scene and hospitalized. A 13-year-old passenger was detained and later released to his parents. A third occupant, described as wearing a black balaclava, fled on foot before the collision and remains unidentified and at large.
The Scene at Brown Road and Elk Grove Florin Road
The crash happened at a signalized intersection in a residential and commercial part of Elk Grove during the pre-dawn hours, when traffic is light and drivers crossing on a green light have little reason to expect a vehicle entering against the signal at speed. A broadside, or T-bone, collision is among the most dangerous crash configurations because the side of a passenger vehicle offers far less crush space and structural protection than the front or rear.
That the wreck threw debris through a fence and left a vehicle in a backyard speaks to the speed involved. Reconstructing exactly how fast the Hyundai was traveling, when the Tesla driver could first have perceived the threat, and where each vehicle was at the moment the light changed will be central questions for both the criminal case and any civil claims that follow. Physical evidence at an intersection like this, including signal timing data, skid and yaw marks, and the final rest positions, tends to be gathered in the first hours and then lost as the roadway reopens.
The Victims and the Injured
The two people killed, Skip Van and Tiffany Chu, were passengers in the back seat of the Tesla, the position most exposed in a driver-side or passenger-side broadside depending on the angle of impact. Both were pronounced at the scene or shortly after, and both were identified by the Sacramento County Coroner.
The Tesla driver, a 55-year-old woman, suffered life-threatening injuries and was hospitalized, and the 63-year-old front passenger was hospitalized with injuries described as not life-threatening. For the surviving occupants, the road ahead can involve extended hospitalization, surgeries, rehabilitation, and long-term care, alongside the loss of the two people who were in the car with them. Each surviving occupant has a personal injury claim that is separate from the wrongful death claims brought on behalf of the two passengers who died.
The Investigation and Likely Charges
Elk Grove Police said the 14-year-old driver is expected to face charges that include vehicle theft, two counts of vehicular manslaughter, and felony evasion of a peace officer. Because of his age, that case will proceed in the juvenile delinquency system rather than adult criminal court unless prosecutors take steps to change that. The 13-year-old passenger was released to his parents, and the search continues for the third occupant who fled the scene in a balaclava.
It is important to separate the two tracks that now run in parallel. The juvenile case is about whether the state can prove the offenses and what consequences follow for the minor. The civil case is about compensating the families and the injured survivors for their losses. The outcome of the juvenile proceeding does not control the civil claims, and a civil case can move forward on its own timeline and under a lower burden of proof, a preponderance of the evidence rather than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
What the Families and Survivors Should Know About Civil Liability
A driver's age does not erase civil responsibility. Under California law a minor can be held liable for negligent or wrongful conduct, and the law provides additional paths to the adults connected to that minor. California Vehicle Code section 17708 can impute a minor's negligent driving to a parent or guardian who signed for or otherwise gave the minor express or implied permission to drive. California Civil Code section 1714.1 holds parents and guardians responsible for a minor's willful misconduct that results in injury or death, subject to a statutory dollar cap. These are the first questions a wrongful death lawyer examines when a young driver is at the center of a fatal crash.
Because the Hyundai was stolen, the case also raises stolen-vehicle and negligent-entrustment questions. The registered owner of a stolen car is generally not liable simply because the car was theirs, but the analysis can change depending on how the vehicle came to be taken, whether keys were left accessible, and who actually controlled the car in the hours before the crash. Negligent entrustment looks at whether an adult knowingly allowed an unfit or unlicensed person to use a vehicle. Sorting out which of these theories applies requires the police report, the theft report from Sacramento, and the statements of everyone connected to the Hyundai.
The police pursuit adds another layer. California Vehicle Code section 17004.7 generally grants a public agency immunity for a pursuit-related collision when the agency has adopted, and trained its officers on, a written pursuit policy that meets the statute's requirements. That immunity is not a foregone conclusion. Whether the department followed its own policy, how the decision to pursue was made, and the fact that the officer was reportedly at least a quarter mile back at impact are the kinds of details a car accident lawyer reviews through the written policy, dispatch logs, and any in-car or body-worn camera footage. Claims against a public entity also carry a much shorter clock, often a six-month government claim deadline, which is one reason these cases need an early look.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Cases involving a stolen vehicle, a juvenile driver, and a police pursuit have several possible sources of recovery and short deadlines that start running right away. Acting early often shapes what is possible later.
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