9 children plus driver killed in Alabama crash

9 children plus driver killed in Alabama crash

Eight of the children who died in the crash were returning from a beach vacation, the authorities said.

A sheriff said the crash was the worst he’s responded to in more than 30 years in law enforcement.

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The following written content from Alyssa Lukpat and Neil Vigdor

Nine children and one adult were killed in Alabama on Saturday afternoon when a van of children returning from a beach vacation and a sport-utility vehicle collided, and the van burst into flames, the authorities said.

The van, owned by the Alabama Sheriffs Youth Ranch, and the S.U.V. collided on Interstate 65 in Fort Deposit, Ala., said Michael Smith, the chief executive of the organization.

Nine people were in the van: five girls, three boys and the driver, Candice Gulley, who survived.

“They were on their way back from the beach,” Mr. Smith said in an interview on Sunday. “Candice was pulled from the vehicle and there was a fire, and all eight children died at the scene.”

The children were between 4 and 17 years old, Mr. Smith said. The Alabama Sheriffs Youth Ranch is a nonprofit organization that provides “Christian, family-style residential homes” for children in crisis, according to its website.

Sheriff Danny Bond of Butler County confirmed that a total of 10 people were killed. Two were in the S.U.V., Wayne Garlock, the Butler County coroner, said in an interview on Sunday. He identified them as Cody Fox, 29, of Marion County, Tenn., and his 9-month-old daughter, Ariana, who Mr. Garlock said was in a child seat. Officials were waiting until relatives were notified before releasing the names of the children who were killed in the van, Mr. Garlock said.

Sheriff Bond said in an interview on Sunday that the crash was the worst he had responded to in his more than 30 years in law enforcement.

“It is traumatic whenever you pull up on a scene like this knowing that you’re dealing with children,” he said. “It’s always worse on your first responders. It was a tough day.”

Sheriff Bond said that both vehicles were traveling north on the interstate when the crash happened, and that it had been raining on and off. Tropical Depression Claudette had been moving through the region.

The sheriff said that the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency would determine the cause of the crash, which happened about 35 miles south of Montgomery. Read more from NY Times

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