Date: 01/24/2012
Time: Around 4:00 P.M.
Location: Little Rock, Arkansas
Vehicle(s) Involved: Lincoln Continental, Oldsmobile Cutlass, School Bus, Chevy Avalanche, Chevy Cruze
By FOX16
"LITTLE ROCK, AR – Little Rock Police are investigating a fatality
accident on S. University near I-30. At least two people are dead.
Police
say the accident was caused by a red Lincoln and a silver Oldsmobile
Cutlass racing southbound on University around 4pm Tuesday. The two cars
clipped each other and the Lincoln lost control and wrapped around a
pole. Police say the driver, 33-year-old Kenyata Lake, died on impact;
the passenger, 22-year-old Jasmine Smith, was critically injured and
died about one hour after the accident.
The Cutlass, which was
driven by 19-year-old Lamar Day, crossed over the median and into
oncoming traffic. Police say it sideswiped an Avalanche, which in turn
sideswiped a school bus. There were no kids on the school bus at the
time. The Cutlass then ran head-on into another vehicle, which Oneshia
McKinney was a passenger. She sat in the backseat as her classmate and
their driver's education teacher talked to them about safe driving. He
spotted the drag race and told them that's the typ of driving
they should avoid.
"To see the same
thing he just told us not to do it, we know now that's not what to do
because we have experienced this with other people," said McKinney."
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The CRV was traveling south on U.S. 27 between Howard and Elizabeth
streets around 7:50 a.m. when it crossed into northbound lanes and
struck a white Ford work truck, according to Nicholasville police Sgt.
Jason Porch.
The vehicles came to rest about 80 yards apart.
“One of the witnesses who was
sitting beside one of the two cars said, ‘Out of the blue, I just saw
the impact. I can’t believe what I just saw,’” Nicholasville police
officer Kevin Grimes said. “And, really, look at the debris field. You
figure 55 or 60 mph came together and it was 120 mph.”
Grimes said it was unclear why the CRV crossed into the northbound lanes.
“We don’t know why, but it came into (the northbound lane) of
traffic, and you see the point of impact,” Grimes said. “The injuries
(for the CRV driver) do seem to be pretty severe. The other guy was
standing around talking.
“The latest from (The University of Kentucky Chandler Medical Center)
was the (CRV driver) was still conscious upon arrival at the hospital’s
emergency room, and that’s all we know at this point.”
The driver of the truck was not injured; Nicholasville firefighters
used the Jaws of Life to extract the driver of the CRV from his vehicle
before Jessamine County EMS transported him to the hospital.
Northbound and southbound traffic was rerouted around Howard and Elizabeth streets while emergency crews worked the scene.
The NPD’s accident-reconstruction unit is on the scene investigating,
and as of 9:30 a.m., officials expected that stretch of U.S. 27 to
remain closed for several more hours.
It’s going to be a while, and it could possibly take more than three hours,” Porch said."
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