You’ve seen it happen.
Someone blows through a red light on La Brea. A driver weaves between lanes on the 101 at 80 mph. A speeder runs a stop sign in your neighborhood and clips a car turning out of a driveway.
Los Angeles finally decided it’s had enough.
On March 24, 2026, the LA City Council voted unanimously to install 125 automated speed cameras across the city — starting this April. The cameras will cover the San Fernando Valley, central LA, the Westside, South LA, and the Harbor area. Every district gets them. They’re going up near busy corridors, major intersections, and streets with the highest history of crashes and injuries.
(KTLA, “Los Angeles to install 125 speed cameras on city streets,” March 25, 2026 — ktla.com; FOX 11 LA, March 25, 2026 — foxla.com)
It’s a step forward. But for drivers who’ve already been hit by someone running a light or speeding through an intersection — the cameras come too late.
The cameras exist because this is a real, ongoing problem.
The reason LA is installing 125 cameras isn’t abstract. Speeding and red-light running are among the leading causes of serious injury crashes in this city — on the freeways and on surface streets alike.
If a speeding driver rear-ended you on the 405. If someone ran a red on Sunset and T-boned your car. If a driver blew through a stop sign in your neighborhood and hurt you or someone in your family — that’s not just bad luck. Under California law, that driver may be liable for your injuries, your medical bills, your lost wages, and more.
Many victims don’t call an attorney because they assume the process is complicated, expensive, or not worth it. It doesn’t have to be any of those things.
What Law Brothers can do for you.
Law Brothers represents accident victims throughout Los Angeles — from fender-benders that left you with lasting pain to serious crashes caused by drivers who had no business being on the road at that speed.
If you were hit by a speeding driver, a red-light runner, or someone who caused a crash and drove away:
- A free consultation tells you honestly whether you have a case — no cost, no obligation
- California’s two-year statute of limitations means you may still have time, even if the accident wasn’t recent
- No fees unless we recover — you don’t pay anything out of pocket to get started
We can come to you. We’re available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Curious where the cameras are going?
See the full map of proposed locations at:
ladot.lacity.gov/speed-safety-system#locations
Law Brothers is here for all of LA.
From the Valley to South LA, the Eastside to the Westside — Shawn and Shervin Lalezary and the Law Brothers team fight for accident victims across Los Angeles every day.
Free consultation. No fees unless we recover. We can come to you.
SOURCE CITATIONS
| Claim | Source | Date | URL |
|---|---|---|---|
| LA City Council unanimously approved 125 speed cameras | KTLA | March 25, 2026 | ktla.com/news/local-news/los-angeles-to-install-125-speed-cameras |
| Fines $50–$500; 11+ mph trigger; LADOT-run; AB 645; revenue to traffic safety | FOX 11 Los Angeles | March 25, 2026 | foxla.com/news/la-speed-camera-locations-approved-2026-guide |
| Coverage: Valley, central LA, Westside, South LA, Harbor; 8–9 cameras per district | FOX 11 Los Angeles | March 25, 2026 | foxla.com/news/la-speed-camera-locations-approved-2026-guide |
| Timeline: April install → summer education → fall warning → late 2026 fines | KTLA + FOX 11 | March 25, 2026 | Both above |
| Camera location map | LADOT Official | Ongoing | ladot.lacity.gov/speed-safety-system#locations |
| California 2-year statute of limitations | CA Code of Civil Procedure §335.1 | Codified state law | — |


