The
bus, carrying students and adult chaperones from the Tuscarawas
Valley school district in eastern Ohio to an education
conference, accounted for three of the dead and 16 of the
injured, including the bus driver, according to Ohio highway
patrol. The injured were all taken to area hospitals.
The three bus passengers who perished were students - two
18-year-old males and a 15-year-old girl. Also pronounced dead
at the scene were all three adults who were riding in one of the
two passenger cars involved in the wreck, the highway patrol
said in a statement.
The driver of the second automobile was taken to a hospital,
along with one of the two truck drivers. Another was treated at
the scene and released, police said.
The crash occurred shortly before 9 a.m. local time on
Interstate-70 near Etna Township, about 21 miles (34 km) east of
Columbus, the state capital. At least three of the five vehicles
involved caught fire, police said.
No details were given about the sequence of events. Police said
the cause of the wreck was under investigation. From images of
the crash scene, there was no sign that weather was a factor.
Local news media footage showed a large motor coach that
appeared to have been struck from behind by a big-rig truck, the
scorched wreckage of which was all that remained intact. A
damaged sport utility vehicle was also visible beside the truck.
Some of the students on the bus were band members who were
scheduled to perform at the Ohio School Boards Association
convention, an annual event in Columbus featuring an education
trade show and a "student achievement fair," according to the
organization's website
The remainder of the conference, which opened on Sunday, was
canceled after Tuesday's accident, the Columbus Dispatch
reported.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; editing by Lincoln
Feast and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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