Thursday, April 14, 2011
Three Oaks Middle teacher injured in Alico Road crash
Lakeland Teen Struck by Car Listed in Serious Condition
Child struck, killed when truck backs over her
Woman airlifted after head-on collision
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Pedestrian Killed in Early Morning Crash on SR 50
Police identify man who died in Port St. Lucie crash Monday
I-4 crash kills Orlando man
Cocoa couple killed in motorcycle crash
Key Largo man dies when struck by truck
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Bicyclist critically hurt in crash on U.S. 441 near Micanopy
Orlando Boy Struck, Killed While Riding Scooter
Man loses balance, fatally hit by truck
Fort Lauderdale truck driver killed crossing I-75 after crash
Clearwater motorcyclist injured in hit-and-run
Ruskin coupled killed in two-vehicle crash
Motorcyclist, 19, killed in Holiday crash
Motorcyclist Killed in Crash On S.R. 33
Truck hits riding mower, killing one and injuring another
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Seven people injured in night of motorcycle crashes
Seven people injured in night of motorcycle crashes
PINELLAS PARK-There was a lot of mayhem involving motorcycles in the area around U.S.19 and 49th Street in Pinellas Park Wednesday night.
A series of incidents involving eight motorcyclists resulted in seven people being injured –six of them motorcyclists. Police said one of the motorcyclists suffered life-threatening injuries; everyone else involved in the incidents is expected to recover.
The incidents took place within about an hour and shut down parts of U.S.19 and 49th Street Wednesday night.
In the first, at 9 p.m. in the 12100 block of 49th Street, police said three motorcycles were speeding north when one of the riders, Pablo Quintana, 20, of Tarpon Springs, struck the back of a 2001 Lincoln that had just made a U-tum
Quintana, who was thrown 200 feet, suffered serious injuries but is expected to recover.
The driver of the Lincoln, Larhonda Robinson, 17, of Pinellas Park, was treated for minor injuries.
The other two motorcycles were laid down by their riders, Sven Desouza, 36, of Cleanl'ater, and Mikhail Lochan, 19, of Hudson. Lochan suffered serious injuries, police said, but is expected to recover. Desouza, who slid about 250 feet, was treated at a hospital for a concussion and road rash, and then was released, police said.
All three motorcyclists were wearing helmets, police said. An investigation is ongoing and police have not yet determined whether charges will be filed.
A second serious motorcycle crash occurred about an hour later as authorities investigated two other minor incidents - both also involving motorcycles in the 12500 block of U.S.19 at about 9:40 p.m., Florida Highway Patrol troopers were summoned to that area to investigate an incident in which a car struck a metal object in the road that was then thrown into a motorcycle. The object disabled both the car and motorcycle.
As traffic slowed, another motorcyclist ran into the back of a car. No one was injured in either incident. But, as troopers investigated the two incidents, three motorcyclists drove by. One of them, Pedro Manuel Perez, 50, of Palm Harbor, ran into the rear of a motorcycle driven by Randall Dean Shoudt, 44, of Clearwa ter. Perez was looking at the initial crash scenes when he hit Shoudt's bike, police said. Both Perez and Shoudt fell onto the road. That's when the third motorcycle, driven by Anthony Francese, 67, of Shrewsbury, Mass., slid into Perez. Francese had tried to stop his motorcycle, but could not and was thrown from the bike, police said. Perez suffered life-threatening injuries, police said, and was taken to Bayfront Medical Center. The hospital did not release his condition Thursday.
Shoudt and Francese suffered minor injurie.s and were treated at the scene.
Police said Perez and Shoudt were not wearing helmets. Francese was wearing a skull cap-like helmet, police said
Police say they are still investigating and deciding whether charge will be filed.
Motorcyclist killed in crash
TAMPA -A 25-year-old man was killed when he wrecked a motorcycle early Thursday morning.
The man, whose name has not been released, was traveling north at high speed on Nebraska Avenue about 2 a.m., according to the Tampa Police Department. At East Yukon Street, he crashed into the back of a pickup, authorities said.
Emergency crews took him to Tampa General Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
Police look at traffic collision, crash was in neighborhood
A 23-year-old man died Tuesday when the car in which he was a passenger smashed into a truck at high speed on a residential street in Palm Bay.
Police said Robert Alexander Williams died at the scene where a Chevrolet Impala ran into a Silverado as the truck was being backed out of a residential driveway in the 1300 block of Jupiter Boulevard.
The deadly two-vehicle crash happened about 2:30 a.m.
"The Impala was going about 100 mph before It crashed," said Yvonne Martinez, spokeswoman for the Palm Bay Police Department.
The driver of the Impala identified as Scott Bradford Williams, 22 -was airlifted to Holmes Regional Medical Center. Police said the driver was not related to the victim. Two other crash victims Adam Beyer, the 19-year-old driver of the truck, and 18-year-old Katlynn Stone were taken by ambulance to a hospital.
Patrol officers along with paramedics from Palm Bay Fire-Rescue tended to the four injured people at the site.
An investigation is ongoing.
Florida Today Brevard County Daily 72,650
April 7, 2011
Car Slams Into School Bus
Workers pull a mangled car from under a school bus Thursday near the intersection of U.S.17 and Golf Course Boulevard, east of Punta Gorda. Officials say the driver of the car suffered life-threatening injuries in the crash. Two of the approximately 40 East Elementary School students on the bus were taken to a local hospital with minor injuries.
Seven-year-old Cierra Deel, a second-grader at East Elementary, was seated near the back of the bus when the crash occurred. Cierra said she felt the car slam into the bus, forcing several of her schoolmates onto the floor and aisle. “I was scared a lot," she said, wearing a brave smile. "But I was sitting with my friend and be was protecting me." Cierra was checked over by paramedics at the scene as her worried parents looked on. All three shed a few tears during their hugged-filled reunion.
The second-grader bashfully admitted that she also cried as she watched one of her friends taken by ambulance to a local hospital. "She hurt her back. She was struck hard and then fell on the floor," Cierra said.
She and all other students not taken to the hospital were brought back to East Elementary School located just blocks from the crash scene on Fairway Drive, with parents advised of the news through the district's automated phone alert system, Parent Link.
Peggy McQueen's 11-year-old grandchild called her frantically after the crash. The Charlotte County woman sped to the scene as quickly as she could, still dressed only in her pajamas. "They're all pretty shook up," McQueen said of the students as she headed back to her car. "My heart is still racing too."
Several distressed parents arrived at the scene, scanning the dozens of children grouped together in a grassy area off the north side ofU.S.17. Many were escorted by law enforcement and school officials across the busy highway to be reunited with their children. After a while, though, parents and other family members were instructed to head to the school as law enforcement and school officials boarded the students onto a different bus that was headed back to East Elementary. That frustrated a few parents, who didn't know at first whether their child was one of the few transported to a hospital. Mike Riley, spokesman for district, said alerts were sent out to parents immediately once radio dispatch called in and reported the crash. Naturally, the alerts were beaten, time wise, by cell phone calls from those at the scene, Riley said.
Emergency workers and school officials keep a watch on dozens of East Elementary School students uninjured in a school bus crash Thursday in Punta Gorda. Two students were taken to Peace River Regional Medical Center with minor injuries. Four other students also suffered "very minor injuries” officials said.
However, many parents first received news of the crash from their frightened children themselves, as many of the older students called their families on their cell phones.
Several parents at the scene expressed concerns that the bus route included crossing the intersection of U.S. 17and Golf Course Boulevard, an intersection without a traffic light that many said is dangerous and prone to collisions. Riley said bus routes are thoughtfully mapped out, with officials utilizing a number of computer programs that review traffic flow, lights and congestion. He said he couldn't recall a past school bus accident at this intersection, but that the district would review it, citing the district's top concern for student safety.