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A shocking video showed the moment an armed motorcyclist fatally slammed into a car after blowing through a red light.
The unidentified motorcyclist, 19, was pronounced dead at the scene after he fatally crashed into a red car on West Irving Park Road in the Portage Park suburb of Chicago.
Police said the driver ran a red light and was speeding westbound around 2am on March 26.
Traffic camera footage shows the sickening moment the pair collided in the intersection with the motorcyclist violently bouncing off the passenger side of the car and his bike smashing into pieces, a video posted to X shows.
The motorcyclist's body can be seen flying several feet down the slick road before he and his bike stop in the middle.
He suffered from 'major trauma to the head and body,' according to ABC 7 Chicago.
An unidentified motorcyclist, 19, was pronounced dead at the scene after he fatally crashed into a red car on West Irving Park Road in the Portage Park suburb of Chicago
Traffic camera footage shows the sickening moment the pair collided in the intersection with the motorcyclist violently bouncing off the passenger side of the car and his bike smashing into pieces
The 21-year-old driver of the red car suffered from cuts to his face and leg and was sent to the hospital, the outlet reported.
Later on, a single police officer could be seen tentatively approaching the biker with a flashlight and removing what appears to be a firearm from the man's body, placing it several feet away from the deceased man.
DailyMail.com has reached out to the Chicago Police Department for comment.
A New York father recently discovered his daughters died in a car crash after tracking their phones to the scene.
He suffered from major trauma to the head and body. The 21-year-old driver of the red car suffered from cuts to his face and leg and was sent to the hospital
Later on, a single police officer could be seen tentatively approaching the biker with a flashlight and removing what appears to be a firearm from the man's body, placing it several feet away from the deceased man
Brian Trumble, 45, exclusively told DailyMail.com he called his daughters Hailey, 19, and Shelby, 17, multiple times after they failed to return home from the Seabreeze Amusement Park in Rochester, New York, on August 1.
After tracking them on the Find My Friends app, Brian drove a few miles to their location and found police already cordoning off the scene.
He described how he collapsed on his car bumper and 'couldn't stand up' when first responders told him one of the girls in the accident had died.
Brian later learned a fireman had stayed by his other daughter's side 'until the end.'