A now-former California Highway Patrol officer and a suspected DUI driver will be charged with murder in connection with the deaths of four people whose vehicle was struck first by the patrol car and then by the second motorist on the 605 Freeway in Norwalk in a pair of high-speed crashes last summer, Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman said today.

Former CHP Officer Angelo Rodriguez, 24, and Iris Salmeron, 27, are set to be arraigned Tuesday in a Bellflower courtroom on four murder charges stemming from the July 20, 2025, deaths of Juliana Hamori, 23, of Huntington Beach; Armand Del Campo, 24, of San Pedro; Jordan Partridge, 23, of Los Angeles; and Samantha Skocilic, 22, of Westminster.

Along with the murder charges, Salmeron is also facing two DUI charges, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

The two could each face a maximum of life in prison if convicted as charged, Hochman said.

Rodriguez — who had been with the CHP since 2023 and was subsequently terminated by the agency after the crash — allegedly was driving more than 130 mph without a siren or emergency lights on when he struck the Nissan containing the four victims when the car entered the carpool lane of the southbound 605 Freeway approaching Imperial Highway. Rodriguez then pulled over to the side of the freeway, turned the patrol vehicle’s lights off and waited for three minutes without alerting a CHP dispatcher about the crash before exiting the freeway, Hochman said. The vehicle containing the four victims remained disabled in the carpool lane, the district attorney told reporters.

The officer subsequently called a CHP dispatcher to report the collision without indicating that he was driving the CHP vehicle involved in the crash, then circled around and returned to the freeway at about 12:59 a.m., roughly two minutes after Salmeron’s vehicle crashed into the disabled car, according to the district attorney.

“… So, she’s driving at over 110 miles an hour, she’s above the legal limit for alcohol consumption and she crashes into the Nissan in the HOV lane, lighting the car on fire and horribly burning the four innocent victims inside the car,” Hochman told reporters at a news conference at his downtownLos Angeles headquarters.

The district attorney said “this horrible tragedy could have been prevented had this officer not been driving at ridiculously high speeds for no reason whatsoever without his lights and sirens on, if the officer hadn’t gone off to the side of the road and not called in this incident immediately, had this other individual, Ms. Salmeron, not been driving at an incredibly excessive speed, drunk, while she crashed into this car.”

Hochman said “the initial crash and the actions of Officer Rodriguez were a substantial factor in the ultimate deaths of these four people,” but said that the vehicle’s occupants were alive after the first crash.

“The second crash is what ignited the car and burned the occupants. We know that they died as part of the second impact,” he said.

The former officer and Salmeron were arrested Friday night by the California Highway Patrol and have remained behind bars since then in lieu of $4 million bail, according to jail records. Hochman said prosecutors will ask that their bail be increased to $8 million each.