Chain-reaction crash kills five, injures 60 on Pennsylvania Turnpike
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[January 06, 2020]
By Steve Gorman and Barbara Goldberg
(Reuters) - A chain-reaction crash
involving a tour bus, three tractor-trailers and a passenger car killed
five people and injured about 60 others on the Pennsylvania Turnpike
near Pittsburgh early on Sunday, state police said.
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigators began arriving
hours later in Mount Pleasant Township, about 40 miles (64 km) southeast
of Pittsburgh, to determine the cause of the pre-dawn pileup.
The accident forced the closure of an 86-mile (138-km) stretch of the
turnpike, a major east-west highway across the state, in both directions
between the exits for New Stanton and Breezewood, adding to post-holiday
travel woes in the region.
The highway was reopened about 16 hours after the crash, state police
said.
The tour bus was headed downhill when it swerved into an embankment at a
bend in the road and rolled over on its side, state police spokesman
Stephen Limani told a news conference hours later.
Two tractor-trailers then plowed into the bus and a third big rig
slammed into the other trucks in a chain reaction that also involved a
car, Limani said. All three trucks, at least one belonging to FedEx Corp
<FDX.N>, were hauling shipments of packages, he said.
Five people from the entangled vehicles were killed and about 60 others
were injured, two of them described as critically hurt, although all of
those taken to hospitals were expected to survive, according to Limani.
Three area hospitals took in a total of 57 patients from the accident,
according to a state police tally.
Limani said the bus, owned by Z&D Tour Inc, was en route from Rockaway,
New Jersey, where the company is based, to Cincinnati. But Z&D owner
Chen Dan Yu said the ill-fated bus trip originated from Manhattan's
Chinatown district and was headed to multiple Ohio destinations, the New
York Times reported.
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Chen told the Times that Z&D had contracted with a Chinatown company
called Ohio Coach for ticket sales on that route, which he said his
company drives daily.
Emergency personnel also faced a language barrier as some of the bus
passengers spoke only Japanese, while others spoke only Spanish,
Limani said. The injured ranged in age from seven years old to some
believed to be their 60s, he said.
The cause of the crash remained under investigation. But Limani said
some motorists reported deteriorating weather conditions at the time
of the accident in an area that lies in the snowbelt of western
Pennsylvania.
"There was some precipitation that was coming down, and I'm sure
that could have played a factor," he told reporters. A state
transportation official told reporters that road crews had been out
overnight applying salt and ash to icy spots on the highway.
NTSB spokesman Eric Weiss said crash investigators would be looking
to see if the bus was equipped with an electronic data recorder
similar to the "black boxes" carried on airplanes.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York and Steve Gorman in
Culver City, California; Editing by Peter Cooney and Christopher
Cushing)
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