Friday, October 28, 2011

7 Dead, 3 Injured Out of Ecuadorean Extended Family in Minivan; Van Hit Deer,

was Hit by Semi; No One Wore Seatbelts

 

 

 

Casualty List Released by the Indiana State Police:

 

Family 1

Cayetano Quizhpe, 28, Elkhart General Hospital, stable condition, father/husband

Maria J. Yupa, 21, deceased, mother/wife

Edwin Quizhpe, 8, deceased, son

Franklin Quizhpe, 6 weeks old, deceased, son

 

Family 2

Pedro Chimborazo, 52, deceased, father/husband

Maria Antonia Yupa, 36, South Bend Memorial Hospital, serious condition, mother/wife

Pedro Chimborazo Yupa, 15, deceased, son

 

Family 3

(Driver) Manuel Chimborazo, 30, South Bend Memorial Hospital, critical condition, father/husband

Maria Chimborazo Pinguil, 26, deceased, mother/wife

Jessica Chimborazo, 8, deceased, daughter

 

[One <I>San Francisco Chronicle</I> commenter argued that seatbelts would not have made a difference under the circumstances, a claim which I initially took seriously. But then I considered that three of the victims survived <I>without</I> seatbelts, which thoroughly debunked the claim. Given that some people survive without wearing seatbelts, the strong likelihood is that still more would have survived, had they been belted in.]

 

 

7 relatives killed in crash on Indiana highway

By Anonymous

Associated Press/San Francisco Chronicle

October 28, 2011; 1:58 p.m.

 

(10-28) 13:58 PDT Bristol, Ind. (AP) --

Seven members of an extended family traveling from Chicago to New Jersey for a funeral, including a newborn and three other children, were killed when their minivan hit a deer and a semi-trailer struck them from behind, police said Friday.

 

Those killed in the crash on the Indiana Toll Road include a 21-year-old mother and her two sons, one of whom was 6 weeks old. The other victims were a 52-year-old man and his 15-year-old son, and a 26-year-old woman and her 8-year-old daughter, said Indiana State Police Sgt. Trent Smith.

 

Three other people from the minivan were hospitalized.

 

A relative had told The Chicago Tribune that all of those on board were Ecuadoran immigrants living in Chicago's Albany Park neighborhood.

 

"The pain is very strong," Manuel Quizhpi, who said he was the brother of one of the victims, told the Tribune.

 

State police said they were members of an extended family composed of three family groups.

 

One family was identified as Cayetano Quizhpe, 28, who was listed in stable condition. His wife, 21-year-old Maria J. Yupa, and sons, 8-year-old Edwin Quizhpe and 6-week-old Franklin Quizhpe, were killed.

 

A second family included Pedro Chimborazo, 52, who was killed along with his 15-year-old son, Pedro Chimborazo Yupa. His wife, Maria Antonia Yupa, 36, was listed in serious condition.

 

The other two killed were Maria Chimborazo Pinguil, 26, and her 8-year-old daughter, Jessica Chimborazo. The driver of the minivan, 30-year-old Manuel Chimborazo, was listed in critical condition, state police said.

 

None of the minivan's 10 occupants were wearing seatbelts during the crash Thursday night about 10 miles east of South Bend, Smith said. Smith said the infant was in a car seat but had not been buckled in.

 

The minivan was heading east on the toll road about 8 p.m. Thursday when it hit a deer and stopped or slowed down, authorities said. The semitrailer was going about 65 mph when it hit the van in the highway's eastbound lanes shortly after that.

 

Both vehicles ended up in the center median, blocking traffic in both directions for several hours. Firefighters and emergency workers at the scene of the crash swarmed around the crumpled remains of the minivan, its side shredded with a torn hunk of metal pinned beneath one of the semi-tractor's tires.

 

The driver of the semi-trailer — Jesse Donovan, 24, of Johnston, R.I. — was released from a hospital after being treated for minor injuries. Smith said he didn't face any charges at this time and preliminary tests indicated that he had not been drinking alcohol.

 

Donovan was an employee of Roehl Transport Inc. of Marshfield, Wis., which owns the truck, said Vice President of Workforce Development and Administration Greg Koepel.

 

"Our hearts go out to those in the accident and their families," said Koepel, who said the company would have no further comment.

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