Accident at California Off-Road Race Kills 8


RALPHIE

GT Owner
Mar 1, 2007
7,278
AOL News
(Aug. 15) -- A popular offroad race in southern California ended in tragedy last night, when a driver lost control of his truck and smashed into a crowd of spectators, killing eight and injuring 12 others.

The accident happened just 12 minutes into the California 200 race, which was being held at Soggy Dry Lake Bed 100 miles northeast of Los Angeles. The annual event attracts tens of thousands of spectators, who line the 50-mile dirt track and watch all terrain vehicles careen across the Mojave Desert, hitting speeds of up to 100 miles per hour.


Eyewitness David Conklin, a photographer covering the event for an offroad magazine, told The Associated Press that the Prerunner truck flipped and plowed into the crowd after hitting a jump known as "the rockpile" about two miles into the race. "There was dust everywhere, people screaming, people running. When I got up to the vehicle I could tell that several people were trapped. There were just bodies everywhere," he said, adding that he "saw one woman with a major head wound lying in a pool of blood. Someone else was crushed beneath the car."

San Bernardino County Fire Department spokeswoman Tracey Martinez told the Riverside Press Enterprise that seven ambulances and 10 emergency helicopters rushed to the crash, and transported 12 people with critical injuries to nearby hospitals. Incredibly, the driver emerged almost unscathed from the wreck, but had to flee the scene when the crowd started "throwing rocks at him," Jeff Talbott, inland division chief for the California Highway Patrol, told the paper.

He added that some members of the crowd had been standing just 10-feet from the dirt track when the crash occurred. "There were no barriers at all," said Talbott. Footage of last year's event on YouTube shows drivers performing stunts close to spectators, who are standing behind a thin orange mesh.

The crash is the latest in a series of race accidents that have proved fatal for spectators. In February 2008, a car smashed into a crowd that had gathered to watch an illegal drag race on a suburban street in Accokeek, Maryland, killing eight people and injuring five. The two drivers were charged with vehicular manslaughter. Darren Bullock, 22, was sentenced to 15 years in jail, and 20-year-old Tavon Taylor, is still awaiting trial.
 
AOL News
(Aug. 15) -- A popular offroad race in southern California ended in tragedy last night, when a driver lost control of his truck and smashed into a crowd of spectators, killing eight and injuring 12 others.

The accident happened just 12 minutes into the California 200 race, which was being held at Soggy Dry Lake Bed 100 miles northeast of Los Angeles. The annual event attracts tens of thousands of spectators, who line the 50-mile dirt track and watch all terrain vehicles careen across the Mojave Desert, hitting speeds of up to 100 miles per hour.


Eyewitness David Conklin, a photographer covering the event for an offroad magazine, told The Associated Press that the Prerunner truck flipped and plowed into the crowd after hitting a jump known as "the rockpile" about two miles into the race. "There was dust everywhere, people screaming, people running. When I got up to the vehicle I could tell that several people were trapped. There were just bodies everywhere," he said, adding that he "saw one woman with a major head wound lying in a pool of blood. Someone else was crushed beneath the car."

San Bernardino County Fire Department spokeswoman Tracey Martinez told the Riverside Press Enterprise that seven ambulances and 10 emergency helicopters rushed to the crash, and transported 12 people with critical injuries to nearby hospitals. Incredibly, the driver emerged almost unscathed from the wreck, but had to flee the scene when the crowd started "throwing rocks at him," Jeff Talbott, inland division chief for the California Highway Patrol, told the paper.

He added that some members of the crowd had been standing just 10-feet from the dirt track when the crash occurred. "There were no barriers at all," said Talbott. Footage of last year's event on YouTube shows drivers performing stunts close to spectators, who are standing behind a thin orange mesh.

The crash is the latest in a series of race accidents that have proved fatal for spectators. In February 2008, a car smashed into a crowd that had gathered to watch an illegal drag race on a suburban street in Accokeek, Maryland, killing eight people and injuring five. The two drivers were charged with vehicular manslaughter. Darren Bullock, 22, was sentenced to 15 years in jail, and 20-year-old Tavon Taylor, is still awaiting trial.

Terrible tragedy. My prayers are with all involved.
 
Very sad. We all take risk, but standing right next to a race track with jumps, etc and no barriers just seems stupid.......
Very sad day for all the families and those who lost their lives
 
As with WRC, Desert racing is run in the "open". It's one of the best and worst things about it, best being how close you can be to the vehicles, the changing terrain with nothing being the same, crossing rough terrain at incredible speed. The worst, if something goes wrong as in this case it can be tragic. In a practical sense it would be impossible to close off or put barriers up to keep spectators and others off the course. Unfortunately some people don't realize that in many parts of a race these vehicles are at the limit and one rock, rut, minor mechanical issue or driver/spectator misjudgment means that instead of missing you bye inches your life can be over. In a perfect world everyone would have good common sense but many just don't realize how quickly things can go wrong. Truly a sad day.
 
Sad. I thought only in European rallies do the spectators get dangerously close to the cars.
 
Sad. I thought only in European rallies do the spectators get dangerously close to the cars.


There was a thread 'round here a while back about a Euro road race crash wherein people also got hurt (killed?). Paranoid Pockets opined at the time that people who stand right next to the roadway watching ANY kind of road race (ESPECIALLY those who stand on the outside radius of a turn :ack) are just asking for it. Now, once again, we're reading about YET ANOTHER tragedy that AGAIN resulted from getting too close to the action w/o being behind protective barriers. This totally sad ocurrence was also a totally preventable one.




Paranoia CAN be a good thing, apparently...