![]() ![]() A reconstruction of the crash conducted by CSP indicated that Anderson was traveling between 16 and 18 miles per hour and Landeros between 88 and 98 miles per hour, which was consistent with recorded speeds from the vehicles’ airbag control modules, the affidavit said. The crash took place between 2019 hours and 36 seconds and 2019 hours and 27 seconds.”Īt the scene of the crash, police observed that the speedometer of Anderon’s Toyota was stuck in place at 50 miles per hour. “I observed as the steering wheel turned I could see the speedometer was at approximately 104 to 105 MPH. “At 2019 hours and 36 seconds I observed Officer Landeros bring his right hand back to the steering wheel and swerve,” the affidavit said. After passing East Dartmouth Avenue, footage showed that Landeros accelerated to over 100 miles per hour and was continuing at that speed when he passed the intersection of South Chambers Road. The affidavit noted that due to the number of cars traveling southbound at the time of the crash, “there would not have been much of a gap for the Toyota to run the stop sign and travel across the southbound lanes without being hit by a southbound vehicle.”īody camera footage reviewed by the Colorado State Patrol show that Landeros responded to the call at 8:16 p.m. The footage shows South Chambers Road just south of the crash location and show’s Landeros’ Chevy Tahoe “traveling at a very high rate of speed passing the house approximately one second before a loud noise from the crash,” the affidavit said. Dashboard footage of the crash was not available but police obtained video footage of the street from a homeowner who provided it to the police. ![]() Landeros’ body-worn camera footage was turned over to the Colorado State Patrol, which conducted an investigation of the crash. While at the hospital Landeros gave his consent for the blood to be tested. A toxicology report to determine whether Anderson was under the influence at the time of death, which can take 10 to 12 weeks to be processed, has not been released.īlood was collected from Landeros by paramedics while he was being transported to the hospital, the affidavit said. The affidavit said that an Arapahoe County Coroner’s Office found a plastic straw with residue consistent with fentanyl on Anderson’s person after the crash. Anderson was wearing a seatbelt while Landeros was not. Kessler said Landeros had not activated his vehicle’s lights nor siren at the time of the crash. Kessler said in a news conference addressing the crash that Anderson was believed to have been intoxicated, and that speed was a factor in the crash.īoth drivers were transported to Aurora South Medical Center with serious injuries, where the civilian was later pronounced dead. Colorado State Patrol spokesman Troy Kessler later said that Anderson failed to yield the right-of-way at the intersection, where the only traffic control devices are stop signs on Bates, and was “T-boned” by Landeros. Landeros was northbound on South Chambers Road at the time and said that Anderson’s Toyota Corolla, eastbound on East Bates Avenue, had pulled in front of him. While en route, he reported his Chevy Tahoe police cruiser had struck another vehicle, that the police vehicle had flipped over, and that he was trapped inside. Landeros was headed to the scene at about 8:15 p.m. “There were no updates to the call that indicated a need to raise the priority level or a need for an emergent response,” the affidavit said. The reporting party had noticed that the door of a vacant unit where an eviction notice was posted appeared to be kicked in. The suspicious incident call Landeros was responding to had been recorded as priority 2 call, which is non-emergent. ![]() ![]() March 4, police were called to the scene of 2300 block of South Blackhawk Street on a report of suspicious activity at a condominium. The rollover crash killed a man later identified as Elias Hans Anderson, 44, and seriously injured Landeros.Īt about 8 p.m. Eduardo Landeros, 26, is facing charges of vehicular homicide, a class 4 felony, and criminally negligent homicide, a class 5 felony. ![]()
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