A man remains in custody after a woman and her nephew were killed when a car being chased by police mounted a pavement in south-east London.
The boy has been named locally as aspiring young actor Makayah McDermot, aged 10. His aunt also died in the crash in Penge on Wednesday afternoon.
She has been named locally as 34-year-old Rosie Cooper.
A 23-year-old male was arrested at the scene and remains at a south London police station.
Three girls, treated for injuries, have been discharged from hospital.
The Met is yet to confirm the names and identities of either the boy or the woman, but have said the young girls, two aged 13 and one aged eight, were related to Makayah and his aunt.
Post-mortem examinations are due to take place later at Princess Royal Hospital.
Makayah had recently auditioned for a part in a television series.
Sam Brown, managing director of Brown and Mills the acting agency that Makayah was signed up to said: "We are all in shock. He was a bright star with a bright future.
"He was a very talented young boy and we were delighted to sign him. His twin sisters have been in the business a while."
One witness said the car was being chased by two police vehicles when the driver "lost control and ploughed into a family".
The car, which is suspected to have been stolen, struck the group at about 14:05 BST on Lennard Road. It had been pursued by police from nearby Birkbeck Road in Beckenham.
Venissa Vassell, described about 20 people lifting the car to free the girls.
One girl who was taken away by ambulance was screaming "I can't feel my legs", Ms Vassell said.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) is investigating.
Over the past 10 years, 252 members of the public have died following road traffic incidents involving the police in England and Wales, according to the IPCC.
In London there were 498 crashes involving a pursuit by Met officers in 2015-16.
Former Metropolitan Police detective chief inspector Peter Kirkham told BBC Radio London the way to avoid such incidents was to introduce tougher penalties for evading the police.
Mr Kirkham said vehicle pursuits were often a "no win situation" for the police officers involved.
He said the main consideration of police offices involved in pursuits was public safety.
The "primary responsibility" for those hurt as a result of a police chase lay with the driver who had failed to stop, Mr Kirkham said.
The current penalty for failing to stop for police is a six month prison sentence but the former police officer said most cases were treated "really leniently" by the courts.
"If we're going to say we don't want the police to pursue [suspects] then we're going to have to put the responsibility back on the driver and invent a new offence of engaging the police in a vehicle pursuit, with a minimum sentence of five years and a lifetime ban from the roads and a maximum sentence of life if they need it," he said.
"He was a very talented young boy and we were delighted to sign him. His twin sisters have been in the business a while."
One witness said the car was being chased by two police vehicles when the driver "lost control and ploughed into a family".
The car, which is suspected to have been stolen, struck the group at about 14:05 BST on Lennard Road. It had been pursued by police from nearby Birkbeck Road in Beckenham.
Venissa Vassell, described about 20 people lifting the car to free the girls.
One girl who was taken away by ambulance was screaming "I can't feel my legs", Ms Vassell said.
The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) is investigating.
Over the past 10 years, 252 members of the public have died following road traffic incidents involving the police in England and Wales, according to the IPCC.
In London there were 498 crashes involving a pursuit by Met officers in 2015-16.
Former Metropolitan Police detective chief inspector Peter Kirkham told BBC Radio London the way to avoid such incidents was to introduce tougher penalties for evading the police.
Mr Kirkham said vehicle pursuits were often a "no win situation" for the police officers involved.
He said the main consideration of police offices involved in pursuits was public safety.
The "primary responsibility" for those hurt as a result of a police chase lay with the driver who had failed to stop, Mr Kirkham said.
The current penalty for failing to stop for police is a six month prison sentence but the former police officer said most cases were treated "really leniently" by the courts.
"If we're going to say we don't want the police to pursue [suspects] then we're going to have to put the responsibility back on the driver and invent a new offence of engaging the police in a vehicle pursuit, with a minimum sentence of five years and a lifetime ban from the roads and a maximum sentence of life if they need it," he said.






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