There's one way to send a message and get people's attention.
Source: KOMO
SEATTLE — A KOMO News photographer spotted a disturbing message on a portable electronic road sign along a busy Seattle highway early Thursday morning.
The sign along the southbound lanes of Highway 99 near Dexter Ave. N. read on one screen, "ONE LESS CEO," then flashed to a second screen reading, "MANY MORE TO GO."
The sign did not belong to a government entity such as the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) or Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT), SDOT's press secretary, Ethan Bergerson, said.
The sign belongs to a private construction construction contractor. An SDOT crew was dispatched to investigate the sign Thursday morning, but when the crew arrived, the message had already been removed, Bergerson said.
It is not yet known who tampered with the sign.
A road sign in Seattle flashed this on Highway 99 days after the shooting death of the UnitedHealth CEO. Our sister station, KOMO, is working now to find out whether the sign was hacked and how long the message has been active. MORE: https://t.co/DsC9Nn7kse
?: KOMO pic.twitter.com/NGYY91QQ8AThere's one way to send a message.
Source: KOMO
SEATTLE — A KOMO News photographer spotted a disturbing message on a portable electronic road sign along a busy Seattle highway early Thursday morning.
The sign along the southbound lanes of Highway 99 near Dexter Ave. N. read on one screen, "ONE LESS CEO," then flashed to a second screen reading, "MANY MORE TO GO."
The sign did not belong to a government entity such as the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) or Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT), SDOT's press secretary, Ethan Bergerson, said.
The sign belongs to a private construction construction contractor. An SDOT crew was dispatched to investigate the sign Thursday morning, but when the crew arrived, the message had already been removed, Bergerson said.
It is not yet known who tampered with the sign.
A road sign in Seattle flashed this on Highway 99 days after the shooting death of the UnitedHealth CEO. Our sister station, KOMO, is working now to find out whether the sign was hacked and how long the message has been active. MORE: https://t.co/DsC9Nn7kse
📸: KOMO pic.twitter.com/NGYY91QQ8A— KUTV2news (@KUTV2News) December 12, 2024