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Accidente fatal 1 Injured August 24, 2024 Russell & Harrison Roads, Salinas, CA

Accidente de dos vehículos en Salinas deja a un joven de 19 años muerto

A 19-year-old Salinas man was killed and a 42-year-old woman was injured in a devastating two-vehicle collision at the intersection of Russell and Harrison Roads in Salinas shortly after 6 a.m. on Saturday, August 24, 2024. The California Highway Patrol responded to the crash, which involved a left-turning Lexus sedan and a northbound Honda SUV, and opened an investigation into the circumstances that caused one vehicle to cross into the path of the other at this busy Salinas intersection.

Resumen del incidente

Fecha
Saturday, August 24, 2024 — approx. 6:11 a.m.
Ubicación
Intersection of Russell Road and Harrison Road, Salinas, Monterey County, California
Escribir
Two-vehicle collision — left-turn vs. oncoming traffic
Fatalidad
Justo Feliciano Esteban, 19, Salinas — front-seat passenger, Lexus sedan; pronounced dead at scene
Lesiones
42-year-old Salinas woman (Honda SUV driver) — minor injuries, declined medical transport
Vehículos
Lexus sedan (southbound on Harrison Road); Honda SUV (northbound on Main Street)
Cause
Lexus attempted left turn onto Russell Road; circumstances under CHP investigation
Lexus Driver
27-year-old man, Salinas — uninjured
Agencia
California Highway Patrol — Monterey Area
Status
Investigation ongoing

Lugar del accidente

What Happened at Russell and Harrison Roads

According to the California Highway Patrol’s Monterey Area division, the collision occurred on the morning of Saturday, August 24, 2024, at approximately 6:11 a.m. at the intersection of Russell Road and Harrison Road in Salinas. Two vehicles were involved: a Lexus sedan that had been traveling southbound on Harrison Road, and a Honda SUV traveling northbound on what investigators described as the Main Street approach to the intersection.

CHP investigators determined that the Lexus driver — a 27-year-old Salinas man — attempted to make a left turn onto Russell Road. For reasons that remained under investigation, the Lexus turned directly into the path of the approaching Honda SUV. The two vehicles collided in the intersection. The impact was severe enough that the 19-year-old front-seat passenger of the Lexus, identified by CHP as Justo Feliciano Esteban of Salinas, was pronounced dead at the scene. The Lexus driver was not physically injured in the crash.

The Honda SUV’s driver, a 42-year-old woman from Salinas, sustained minor injuries in the collision. She was assessed by emergency personnel who responded to the scene but she declined medical transport to a hospital. No other occupants were reported in either vehicle.

The California Highway Patrol documented the scene, collected physical evidence from the intersection, and opened a formal investigation into the circumstances that led to the left-turn maneuver. The intersection of Russell and Harrison Roads is a multi-directional crossing in the Salinas area where differences in speed, sight distance, and the timing of turning movements can all contribute to serious collision risk, particularly in the early morning hours when traffic volumes are lower but vehicle speeds can be higher.

The Intersection and the Traffic Environment

The Salinas area of Monterey County sits within one of California’s most heavily trafficked agricultural corridors. Rural and semi-rural intersections like Russell and Harrison Roads serve both local residential traffic and vehicles moving between farming operations, distribution points, and the city of Salinas itself. These intersections frequently experience collisions tied to left-turn maneuvers, where drivers misjudge the speed or closing distance of oncoming vehicles — particularly during low-light conditions or in the early morning hours when fatigue can also be a factor.

California Vehicle Code Section 21801 places a clear legal obligation on any driver executing a left turn: that driver must yield the right-of-way to all oncoming vehicles that are close enough to pose a hazard. When a vehicle turning left fails to satisfy that obligation — whether due to inattention, misjudgment of speed, impairment, distraction, or mechanical failure — and the result is a collision that kills or injures another person, California law creates a basis for civil liability.

The CHP investigation in cases like this typically examines the point of impact within the intersection, the final resting positions of both vehicles, any pre-collision braking evidence such as skid marks or tire marks, the speeds of the vehicles at the time of impact, sight lines at the intersection, and whether any external factors — including lighting, signage, road markings, or vegetation — may have contributed to a driver’s inability to detect oncoming traffic. Witness statements, if any were obtained, also form a key part of the evidentiary record.

For Justo Feliciano Esteban’s family, understanding what happened at that intersection on August 24, 2024 is not only a matter of grief — it is a matter of legal accountability. As a passenger in the Lexus, Esteban had no role in the driving decision that placed him in the path of the oncoming Honda. Passengers in California have the strongest possible legal standing in collision cases, as they bear no contributory fault in the decisions that led to the crash.

Passengers and Wrongful Death Under California Law

When a passenger is killed in a traffic collision in California, the legal framework for the surviving family is governed by California Code of Civil Procedure Section 377.60. That statute grants certain close family members — including the surviving spouse, domestic partner, children, and in some circumstances parents — the right to bring a wrongful death action against any party whose negligence caused or substantially contributed to the death.

In a left-turn collision like this one, the question of liability typically focuses on the driver who executed the turn. If the CHP investigation determines or supports a finding that the Lexus driver failed to yield to the approaching Honda before attempting the left turn onto Russell Road, that driver’s conduct may constitute negligence under California law. Negligence in the context of a fatal traffic collision can expose the negligent driver — and in some circumstances the vehicle owner, an employer, or another party with legal responsibility — to a wrongful death claim.

Recoverable damages in a California wrongful death case can include funeral and burial expenses, the economic value of financial support the deceased would have provided over a lifetime, the loss of gifts or benefits the family would have received, and compensation for the loss of companionship, affection, guidance, and moral support that the death has caused. For the family of a 19-year-old — someone whose entire adult life lay ahead — these losses are profound and long-lasting.

It is also worth noting that California follows a system of pure comparative negligence, meaning that even if fault is shared among multiple parties, a claim can still proceed. The recovery may be proportionally reduced by any share of fault assigned to the claimant’s side — but the right to seek compensation is not extinguished.

Legal Options for the Esteban Family

The Human Cost: Losing a 19-Year-Old

Justo Feliciano Esteban was 19 years old — an age at which most young adults in California are beginning to chart an independent course. Whether he was just starting a career, enrolled in school, or still figuring out his path, the collision at Russell and Harrison Roads on August 24, 2024 erased every possibility that remained ahead of him. The loss of a child at any age is devastating. The loss of a teenager or a young adult — someone with so many years, relationships, and contributions still ahead — carries a particular and permanent weight for the family left behind.

No legal process can restore what this family has lost. But California law does recognize the right of surviving family members to hold negligent parties accountable. Wrongful death claims do not bring a loved one back, but they can prevent the full financial burden of that loss from falling entirely on a grieving family, and they can hold the responsible party to account in a way that honors the person who died.

Left-Turn Accidents and Fatal Collision Risk in California

~40%
Intersection collisions in California — including left-turn crashes — account for a significant share of all serious injury and fatal traffic accidents statewide each year.
California Office of Traffic Safety / SWITRS data
94%
Of all traffic crashes in the United States are attributed primarily to human error — including failures to yield, misjudgment of vehicle speed, and inattention during turning maneuvers.
Administración Nacional de Seguridad del Tráfico en Carreteras (NHTSA)
3,600+
Traffic fatalities occur in California each year. Monterey County, with its mix of agricultural access roads and higher-speed rural intersections, sees a disproportionate share of serious and fatal collisions.
California SWITRS Annual Report
2 Años
California’s statute of limitations for a wrongful death claim is generally two years from the date of death. For an August 2024 crash, the window typically closes in August 2026.
Código de Procedimiento Civil de California § 335.1

Why Early Legal Action Matters After a Fatal Collision

In the days and weeks following a fatal collision in California, the window for preserving critical evidence begins to close quickly. Intersection surveillance cameras typically overwrite their recordings on short cycles. Physical evidence at the crash scene — skid marks, debris fields, and vehicle paint transfers — can be washed away or disturbed. Witnesses move, forget, or become harder to locate. Insurance companies retained by the at-fault driver will often begin investigating the claim from their client’s perspective almost immediately after a crash is reported.

Early legal involvement allows an attorney to formally request the CHP collision report and any supplemental investigative materials, identify whether any public or private cameras captured the crash or the moments leading up to it, send preservation notices to any relevant parties, and review the insurance coverage landscape before the family is placed in a position of negotiating from a weaker informational foundation.

For a case involving the death of a 19-year-old passenger — someone who bears no fault in the collision — the legal path is often cleaner than in cases involving comparative fault between drivers. But that clarity is only an advantage if it is recognized and acted upon before evidence disappears or coverage disputes arise.

Preguntas Frecuentes

Can the family of the 19-year-old killed at Russell and Harrison Roads pursue a wrongful death claim?
Yes. If another driver’s negligence caused or contributed to the collision — for example, by executing an unsafe left turn without properly yielding to oncoming traffic — the family of the deceased may have the right to file a wrongful death claim under California law. Recoverable damages can include funeral and burial costs, loss of the financial support the victim would have provided, and compensation for the family’s grief and loss of companionship.
What does a left-turn failure-to-yield crash mean for legal liability in California?
Under California Vehicle Code Section 21801, a driver making a left turn must yield to all oncoming traffic close enough to pose a hazard. If the Lexus driver failed to yield to the approaching Honda SUV before turning onto Russell Road, that could constitute negligence and form the basis of a wrongful death or personal injury claim. The CHP investigation will be central to establishing the facts of the turn.
What evidence is most critical after a fatal two-vehicle collision in Monterey County?
Critical evidence includes the CHP collision report, photographs of the intersection and vehicle damage, physical evidence such as skid marks and debris, surveillance footage from nearby properties, statements from any witnesses, and medical and toxicology records. Acting quickly to identify and preserve this evidence significantly strengthens a family’s legal position.
How long does a family have to file a wrongful death claim in California?
California’s statute of limitations for a wrongful death claim is generally two years from the date of death. For an accident that occurred on August 24, 2024, that window typically closes around August 24, 2026. Waiting too long can allow critical evidence to disappear and witnesses’ memories to fade. Consulting a lawyer promptly is strongly advisable.

A Young Life Lost at a Salinas Intersection. His Family Deserves Answers.

If your family lost someone in the Russell and Harrison Roads collision — or any serious crash in Monterey County or the surrounding Central Coast region — Scranton Law Firm is here to help. We offer free, confidential consultations and charge no fee unless we win your case.

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