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Aug. 26, 2016: Tire tracks made by a vehicle illegally crossing the Racetrack Playa at Death Valley National Park, Calif. (National Park Service via AP,File)
Aug. 26, 2016: Tire tracks made by a vehicle illegally crossing the Racetrack Playa at Death Valley National Park, Calif. (National Park Service via AP,File)
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DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (AP) — Federal investigators have identified a driver suspected of taking an illegal joyride on a fragile, dry lake bed in Death Valley National Park, leaving 10 miles of swerving tire tracks.

Officials haven’t released the suspect’s name, but park spokeswoman Abby Wines told the Los Angeles Times on Tuesday (http://lat.ms/2cVP8OO ) that she’s hopeful the person will be criminally charged.

Motor vehicles are banned from the site known as Racetrack Playa, where visitors can see how wind and ice push rocks that leave lengthy trails in the lake bed. Still, new tire tracks show up there every few years.

Wines says this case is the worst she’s ever seen.

Officials say they may try to restore the protective crust on the lake bed but aren’t sure how to go about it.

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Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com/