Predawn Street Takeover ERUPTS In Gunfire

Police cars with flashing lights at a nighttime scene near a motel

Four people were shot in the middle of a “street takeover” that turned a busy Los Angeles County intersection into a predawn crime scene.

Story Snapshot

  • Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies responded to a reported takeover near Del Mar and Garvey avenues in Rosemead around 1:47 a.m. Sunday, and gunfire erupted shortly after.
  • Authorities said four victims—three men ages 19 to 22 and a 17-year-old—were hospitalized in stable condition; three reportedly drove themselves to hospitals.
  • Investigators are working off surveillance and attendee video, but the shooter has not been identified and remains at large.
  • The Rosemead shooting follows a string of takeover-related incidents across Los Angeles, including assaults, vandalism, and a prior shooting in downtown L.A.

Rosemead takeover erupts into gunfire

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department deputies were dispatched early Sunday after reports of a street takeover at Del Mar and Garvey avenues in Rosemead, a commercial area lined with eateries and small businesses. Authorities said the call came in around 1:47 a.m., and gunfire broke out around 2:00 a.m., sending hundreds of onlookers running for cover. Detectives said four people were struck by gunfire and transported for treatment.

Investigators said all four victims were hospitalized in stable condition, including three men between 19 and 22 and one 17-year-old. Officials also reported an important detail that illustrates how chaotic these scenes become: one victim was transported by emergency responders, while three drove themselves to hospitals. That kind of self-evacuation can complicate early evidence collection and timelines, especially when large crowds scatter and the suspect is still unaccounted for.

What street takeovers are—and why they keep escalating

Street takeovers are unauthorized gatherings where drivers block intersections and perform stunts such as doughnuts while crowds watch, record, and livestream. In Los Angeles County, these events often happen in the early morning hours, and they can draw hundreds of spectators quickly—making it hard for patrol units to safely push through once roads are jammed. In Rosemead, the combination of a dense crowd, moving vehicles, and nearby businesses amplified the public-safety risk when shots rang out.

Recent history shows how quickly “car stunts” can turn into broader mayhem. In March, a takeover near Crypto.com Arena reportedly spilled into an apartment building lobby and was linked to assault and vandalism, with video showing windows shattered and people fighting. Two weeks later, multiple takeovers happened within a single day, including an incident where crowds blocked and climbed on a Metro bus, trapping maintenance workers inside. Another shooting during a downtown takeover in February left an 18-year-old wounded.

Law enforcement response—and the limits of reactive policing

Los Angeles leaders have publicly acknowledged that takeovers are not just a nuisance but a recurring threat to public order. Mayor Karen Bass previously announced a strategy that included patrol cars, horse patrols, foot patrols, and undercover units, paired with a “zero tolerance” message for violence and destruction. That approach reflects a basic reality: when crowds are already entrenched, police often face a tradeoff between rapid intervention and the risk of sparking panics, crashes, or confrontations.

The bigger picture: public trust, accountability, and basic order

Street takeovers expose a deeper frustration many Americans share, even across party lines: the sense that government can’t—or won’t—maintain basic standards in public spaces. When intersections become arenas for illegal stunts, residents and business owners pay the price through fear, lost commerce, and higher security costs. One reported comment from a resident—saying the situation is “very scary” and prompting a move—underscores the real-world cost when order breaks down.

For now, the Rosemead case remains an investigation with key unanswered questions. Detectives are reviewing surveillance video from nearby businesses and cellphone footage from attendees to identify the shooter and determine what sparked the gunfire, and officials have said it is unclear whether the violence was targeted or random. Until arrests are made and motives established, the most concrete takeaway is also the simplest: large illegal gatherings plus lawlessness create predictable danger.

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Predawn Rosemead Street Takeover Ends with Four Hospitalized with Gunshots

4 shot during street takeover in Rosemead