Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Thursday, December 12, 2024 79° Today's Paper


Top News

Church van crashes into canal, killing 8 and injuring 10

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Workers pull a van out of a canal at the intersection of US 27 and State Road 78 West, Monday, March 30, 2015, near Moore Haven, Fla. Eight people were killed and 10 injured when the church van ran through a stop sign, crossed all four lanes of a rural highway and crashed into in a canal. (AP Photo/Luis M. Alvarez)

MOORE HAVEN, Fla. >>  An overloaded church van ran through a stop sign, crossed all four lanes of a dark rural highway and nosedived into a canal, killing eight people and injuring 10 early Monday in southwest Florida, authorities said.

"They didn’t see that stop sign. They shot right through it," Glades County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Duane Pottorff said. "It was a sad evening."

The van was heading back to a church in Fort Pierce, north of West Palm Beach on the Atlantic coast, after a weekend convention in Fort Myers, according to the Florida Highway Patrol.

Eighteen people were in the 15-seat-capacity van when it crashed about 12:30 a.m. Monday, according to the Highway Patrol.

A 911 call came in at 12:31 a.m., and deputies arrived four minutes later, officials said. The van had gone down an eight-to-10 foot embankment and landed in shallow water of the canal, which is lined with tall grass and weeds.

"That’s a very steep embankment, and they kind of did a nosedive," said Lt. Gregory S. Bueno of the Highway Patrol.

The crash killed the male driver and seven passengers, four male and three female, troopers said. Their names were not released pending notification of their families.

The Florida Highway Patrol identified 10 other passengers taken to four hospitals. Among them was a 4-year-old child — who was not in a car seat, Bueno said — in serious condition. Four other adults were in critical condition.

All the people in the van were from Fort Pierce.

Nozaire Nore, 48, suffered a broken leg in the crash. With his niece translating from Haitian Creole, Nore told Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers that the driver didn’t notice a curve in the road and couldn’t stop in time.

Nore said he is a migrant farm laborer who travels to New Jersey and New York to pick apples, watermelons and other crops.

Bueno said that at the time of the crash, it wasn’t foggy at the crash scene in Glades County, west of Lake Okeechobee. There is no lighting on the stretch of road, and the T-intersection is surrounded by farmland.

The Highway Patrol spoke briefly spoke to some survivors and will conduct more in-depth interviews, Bueno said. A full investigation will assess any mechanical issues with the van, he added.

On Monday morning, the van had been loaded onto the back of a flatbed truck. The front of the van was smashed in, and the door had been removed.

A message left for the pastor of Independent Haitian Assembly of God, Esperant Lexine, was not immediately returned.

Under Florida law, a Class C commercial driver’s license is required to drive any vehicle designed to transport 16 or more people, including the driver. The driver’s name in the crash had not been released.

Comments are closed.