NTSB: Truck driver in Okla. crash didn’t try to avoid collision
By JON HERSKOVITZ REUTERS
Investigator-in-charge Jennifer Morrison, left, and NTSB Board Member Robert Sumwalt, center, view the wreckage of a bus crash near Davis, Oklahoma, in this undated handout photo provided by the National Transportation Safety Board on Sunday, September 28, 2014. The crash on Friday, Sept. 26, 2014, killed four members of a Texas college softball team. (Reuters/National Transportation Safety Board, handout)
Investigator-in-charge Jennifer Morrison, right, and NTSB Board Member Robert Sumwalt view the wreckage of a bus crash near Davis, Oklahoma, in this undated handout photo provided by the National Transportation Safety Board on Sunday, Sept. 28, 2014. Four members of a women’s college softball team were killed and a dozen other people were injured when a truck crashed into the players’ bus on an Oklahoma highway late on Friday, authorities said. (Reuters/National Transportation Safety Board, handout)
First responders tend to a North Central Texas College bus that was involved in a crash near Ardmore, Oklahoma, Friday, Sept. 26, 2014, in this still image captured from KXAS TV video footage. Four members of the college’s women’s softball team were killed and a dozen other people were injured when a truck crashed into the players’ bus on an Oklahoma highway late Friday, authorities said. (Reuters/Courtesy KXAS, handout)
The North Central Texas College bus that was involved in a crash is removed near Ardmore, Oklahoma, on Friday, Sept. 26, 2014, in this still image captured from KXAS TV video footage. Four members of the college’s women’s softball team were killed and a dozen other people were injured when a truck crashed into the players’ bus on an Oklahoma highway late Friday, authorities said. (Reuters/Courtesy KXAS, handout)
AUSTIN, Texas — There was no sign the driver of a truck that hit a bus, killing four college softball players from Texas, tried to avoid the collision after he left an Oklahoma highway traveling at about 70 mph, U.S. officials said on Monday.
The tractor-trailer was northbound on Interstate 35, a major north-south corridor, late Friday when driver Russell Staley, 53, veered across the median and struck a bus carrying the women’s team from North Central Texas College.
“There was no swerving,” National Transportation Safety Board member Robert Sumwalt told a briefing in Oklahoma. He said an investigation of the scene showed the truck was approaching a curve in the road and continued straight, taking it into the bus’s path.
Staley told investigators he was “distracted” inside the truck’s cab just before the accident, but the validity of the statement was still being assessed along with other evidence from the scene, Oklahoma Highway Patrol Captain Ronnie Hampton said.
The NTSB has not yet spoken to Staley, Sumwalt said.
Three members of the Lady Lions softball team were pronounced dead at the scene, and a fourth player died after being taken to a hospital, authorities said.
Fifteen student-athletes were on the bus, which was driven by their coach as they made their way home after a game at Southern Nazarene University, about 150 miles north of their college in Gainesville, Texas.
“This is a tragedy,” Sumwalt said.
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