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DEA raid underway at Los Angeles' MacArthur Park

Updated 6/21/2026, 7:20:52 PMCluster Impact 4.54

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GDELTCalifornia

Central Park runaway horse carriage falls, killing 18-year-old – NBC Los Angeles

Goldstein: 2.4Tone: -5.5

An 18-year-old has died following a violent crash involving a runaway horse carriage in Central Park in New York City on Wednesday afternoon. The NYPD confirmed the young man's death several hours after the horse bolted away from its driver, leaving its passengers unable to slow the ride until the horse eventually crashed into another carriage near Tavern on the Green, a popular restaurant. Cell phone video captured the collision. Stream Los Angeles News for free, 24/7, wherever you are. The impact of the crash toppled the carriage onto its side, sending the 18-year-old passenger, identified as Romanch Mahajan, out and onto the ground. Police said the young man smacked his head against the pavement and was rushed to a nearby hospital in critical condition. Mahajan, a tourist from India, ultimately died from his injuries. Officers said the rest of the family members inside the carriage only had minor injuries. Another horse carriage driver worker said she received a call about the crash and rushed to the scene to help out. Christina Hansen said she checked on the animal and tied the horse to a nearby pole. "I drove my horse over here, at that point this horse had flipped over a carriage," Hansen said. "The horse is absolutely fine." Hansen said she spoke to the driver of the runaway carriage, who had returned to the area where the horse bolted, and was "very, very shaken up." The Transport Workers Union, which oversees the horse carriage industry, said it supported a "full investigation" of the incident. Local Get Los Angeles's latest local news on crime, entertainment, weather, schools, cost of living and more. Here's your go-to source for today's LA news. "It appears the driver was at least at arm’s length from his horse to take a photo of his passengers in the carriage. The horse, which had been in the park for only six weeks, took off for unknown reasons," Alexander Kemp, administrative vice president of TWU Local 100, said in a statement. "This is unacceptable. A driver is not supposed to leave the carriage to take photos – ever." Wednesday's incident in Central Park comes one week after a 16-year-old horse named Deniz died from reportedly eating a toxic plant lining the park. The Central Park Conservancy referenced last week's tragedy in its statement, reiterating their call to ban horse carriages in the park. “As details of today’s incident come into focus, our thoughts are with the injured. That this frightening situation is just days after the previous one underscores the dangers posed by horse carriages to Park visitors, carriage drivers, and the horses themselves," the statement said. The recent incidents involving carriage horses has sparked renewed attention to Ryder's Law, a bill under consideration by the New York City Council to wind down the industry in Central Park.

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