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  • Axios San Francisco

    Road rage shooting incidents in California increased over the past decade

    By Alex FitzpatrickKavya BeherajShawna Chen,

    2024-05-20
    Data: The Trace via Gun Violence Archive ; Map: Axios Visuals

    Road rage shooting incidents in California increased over the past decade, a new report finds.

    The big picture: State numbers mirror shooting incidents nationally that have increased by 450% between 2014 and 2023, according to a new analysis of data from the Gun Violence Archive (GVA) by The Trace .


    State of play: The number of reported road rage shooting incidents in California increased from 18 in 2014 to 33 in 2022 before dipping to 26 in 2023, per The Trace's findings.

    • That's an average of 0.52 incidents per million people between 2014 and 2023.
    • 63% of road rage shooting incidents involved injury or death.
    • The number of reported road rage shooting incidents per million people ticked up from 0.47 in 2014 to 0.7 in 2023.
    • San Francisco itself had 10 road rage incidents involving firearms from 2014 to 2023, eight of which resulted in shootings — 10 victims were shot.

    Zoom in: Despite California's tougher gun laws , the Bay Area has had a string of notable road rage-related shootings over the past year.

    • Just last month, police said an argument near an intersection led two people to exchange fire in Santa Rosa.
    • Law enforcement officers also seized two guns and ammunition from a suspect in March after a road rage freeway shooting in the East Bay caused minor injuries.
    • A South San Francisco man was shot in the shoulder in September after another driver tailgated him and fired into the passenger window, his daughter said.
    • In another incident last May, a driver was accused of firing 15 rounds of ammunition into two vehicles during a Highway 1 fender-bender that injured a man and a 3-year-old, per local authorities.

    Yes, but: Freeway shootings overall, which include road rage incidents but cover all violence involving firearms on state freeways, have decreased in California after reaching a peak of 447 in 2021.

    • Since then, the state has recorded a 38% reduction in shootings and a 75% reduction in deaths, according to the California Highway Patrol .

    Caveat: The GVA is a private nonprofit that produces a range of gun violence estimates based on police reports, government data, news stories and more.

    • Some incidents go unreported, so not every relevant episode is captured.

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