Car culture meets car crusher

RIALTO, Calif. – Charles Hoang winced when the whoosh went out of the tires. Daniel Maldonado took pictures with a digital camera as glass exploded and rained down to the ground.

The cars the teens had so meticulously souped up and tricked out were crushed Wednesday as part of a crackdown on illegal street racing in Southern California.

“That’s my heart, my dream,” said Hoang, 18, of Chino, who was surrounded by friends as his 1998 Acura Integra was put into a compactor. “That’s my girlfriend, the love of my life. The cops can crush my car, but they can’t crush my memories.”

Nearly 1,000 people – drivers and spectators – have been arrested for investigation of street racing activities over the past two years in San Bernardino County alone. Police need a court order to destroy the cars.

Authorities destroyed six vehicles Wednesday at an auto graveyard, hoping would-be racers think again after looking at the mashed machines. Illegal street racing is responsible for or suspected in 13 deaths in Southern California since March.

Hoang said he was caught late last year racing his prized car, on which he spent at least $10,000 to get into top shape. The 350-horsepower engine topped out at 160 mph, Hoang said, swearing it could beat a Corvette or even a Ferrari.

Maldonado said he has taken the advice of police by racing legally on one of several race courses around Southern California. For the money spent in fines and other penalties – on average about $5,000 for illegally modified cars – Ontario police Cpl. Jeff Higbee said street racers could compete about 250 times a year at a legitimate track.

“If you have to race, take it to a legal venue,” Higbee said. “But as long as they keep racing illegally, we keep crushing their cars.”

All three men who saw their vehicles destroyed said they believe illegal street racing will continue to prosper across the region.

“It will never go away,” Maldonado said. “If it’s in your heart, you will continue to do it until you can’t anymore.”

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