A 28-YEAR-old woman died in a crash on the A487 bypass between Felinheli and Caernarfon.

At about 7pm on Monday, April 3, North Wales Police received reports of a four-vehicle crash involving a dark grey Audi A3 saloon, BMW 1 series, Peugeot 208 and a Skoda Octavia.

Emergency services, including the Wales Air Ambulance, Welsh Ambulance and North Wales Fire and Rescue service attended, but sadly, the woman driving the Peugeot was pronounced dead at the scene.

The woman’s family and the coroner have been informed.

A four-year-old child has been taken to Alder Hey Hospital with life threatening injuries.

A woman was airlifted to Stoke Hospital with serious injuries.

Two further people were taken to Ysbyty Gwynedd in Bangor with serious injuries.

Sergeant Emlyn Hughes from the Roads Policing Unit said: “I offer my deepest condolences to the families of the people involved in this tragic incident, which is sadly being investigated as a fatal road traffic collision.

“I am appealing to anyone who was travelling on the A487 bypass between 6.30pm-7pm who witnessed the collision, or may have dashcam footage leading up to it, particularly of the Audi, to get in touch with police.

The road closed for more than 12 hours. It was re-opened shortly before 7am this morning (April 4).

A Welsh Ambulance Service spokesperson said: "We were called shortly before 6.45pm on Monday, April 3 to a road traffic collision involving three vehicles at Felinheli.

"We deployed three rapid response vehicles, five emergency ambulances, two air ambulances and were supported by the Emergency Medical Retrieval and Transfer Service.

"Three patients were conveyed to Ysbyty Gwynedd, and one patient to Royal Stoke University Hospital for further treatment."

Anyone with information is asked to contact police via their webchat or call 101. Quote reference 23000283204.

*A NOTE FROM POLICE TO OUR READERS*

This is a live investigation. Any footage or photos in relation to this incident should only be shared with police for investigation purposes and not on social media.

We would urge members of the public to delete any footage that is not relevant to the investigation.