Is This the Trail of Evidence From a Hit-And-Run?
LOS ANGELES, CA - NOVEMBER 18: Cars are deliberately crashed during the shooting of an auto insurance commercial on-location downtown on November 18, 2006 in Los Angeles, California. A report released this week by the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) Institute of the Environment finds that the movie and TV industry is a major generator of smog, soot and greenhouse gas pollution. According to the report, trucks, generators, the dynamiting of sets, earthquake and fire special effects, and other activities by the industry produces140,000 tons of ozone and diesel particulate pollution each year. It is probably second only to petroleum refineries in air pollutant emissions, for which comparable data were not available, and is ranked third in greenhouse gas emissions for southern California. The entertainment industry generates $29 billion in revenue and employs 252,000 people in the region, and some industry officials have expressed a desire to further reduce pollution out of concern that stricter rules could drive more filming to other states and Canada. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
A guy posted cell phone video of a parked car that had been rear-ended. And then he follows a trail of what looks like radiator fluid on the road that goes from the crash to an SUV in a driveway a few doors down.
That SUV’s front end is smashed, and the guy shooting the video says it was a hit-and-run, but we don’t know for sure if that’s the case.