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Monmouth County traffic fatalities spike; officials urge caution on roads

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Following a historically deadly summer on area roads, Acting Monmouth County Prosecutor Lori Linskey and the county’s police chiefs are urging local motorists to exercise additional caution heading into autumn.

According to a Sept. 1 press release from the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office, 13 people died in July due to vehicular incidents occurring across the county, the highest such figure recorded in any month since at least 2014.

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“We are seeking the public’s help in preventing as many of these traffic accidents as possible, by taking proactive steps to stay safe and protect one another,” Linskey said. “It is an absolute imperative that we do everything in our power, across every level of law enforcement, to seek to ensure this is a trend that gets quickly reversed.”

“Even one death on Monmouth County roads is one too many,” said Manasquan Police Chief Michael Bauer, president of the Monmouth County Police Chiefs Association. “I and my fellow police chiefs stand in firm solidarity on this issue, resolutely pledging to leverage every strategic enforcement tool available to us in an effort to protect the safety and security of our motorists and pedestrians.”

A total of 41 people have died as the result of incidents occurring on area roads so far this year, eclipsing the figures recorded in each of the last four full calendar years, according to the press release.

An analysis performed by the prosecutor’s office revealed that the 41 deaths resulted from 34 separate events, including 26 collisions and eight instances of a pedestrian being struck and killed by a vehicle.

Approximately half of the individuals who were killed as the result of those collisions were not wearing a seat belt at the time of impact.

Seven of the incidents involved a driver who was under the influence of alcohol or drugs, with seven more incidents currently under review, as results of toxicology tests remain pending, according to the press release.

And each pedestrian killed this year was not in a marked crosswalk at the time they were struck, according to the press release.

The victims of these incidents ranged in age from 3 to 92; individuals dying in July alone included a mother and her youngest child, a son and both of his parents, and a group of three friends traveling together.

“Each of these 41 individuals left behind people who loved them; people who never dreamed they would be gone so soon,” Linskey said. “And none of them imagined the last morning they woke up that their lives would be so tragically and violently cut short.”

The solution is simple, Linskey said: If you consume any alcohol or drugs, do not get behind the wheel. Do not use a cell phone while driving. Obey posted speed limits and road signs. Only cross a street in a marked crosswalk and only when you have the right of way. And wear a seat belt for every trip, every time, no matter how short.

Extra caution should be exercised on highways; 13 fatal incidents have taken place this year on local roads and back roads, but the other 21 all occurred on highways, including six on the Garden State Parkway and six on Route 9, according to the press release.

“New Jersey is a crowded state, with innumerable motorists in a great hurry to arrive at their destination, but gaining a few extra minutes is never a fair trade for putting your life or someone else’s life at risk. All of us must exercise a little more patience and understanding in order to arrive alive,” Linskey said.

Shortly after the prosecutor’s office issued its press release regarding motor vehicle fatalities, another fatal collision occurred in Monmouth County.

According to the prosecutor’s office, a two-vehicle collision in Tinton Falls left two people dead on the evening of Sept. 1.

Shortly after 7 p.m., members of the Monmouth County Serious Collision Analysis Response Team, the prosecutor’s office and the Tinton Falls Police Department responded to the area of Shafto Road (Route 547) and Asbury Avenue (Route 16).

At that location, first responders located the two vehicles involved in the collision: a 2021 Audi S6 driven by a 36-year-old male resident of Manalapan and a 2005 Ford Freestyle driven by a 52-year-old female resident of Brick Township.

The female motorist was pronounced deceased at the scene, while the male driver
was transported to Jersey Shore University Medical Center, Neptune, where he succumbed to his injuries a short while later. There were no passengers in either vehicle, according to a press release.

The circumstances surrounding the incident remain under investigation, according to the prosecutor’s office.

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