Hamilton Journal News

OHIO WRONG WAY CRASHES 2015-19

- OHIO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTA­TION Contact staff reporter Rick McCrabb at 513-483-5216 or email Rick.McCrabb@coxinc. com.

Year 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

Total

Total Crashes 69 71 71 86 71 82 450 way,” said Pat Brown, driving school supervisor at AAA Allied Group.

Of Ohio’s 88 counties, Butler and Warren counties were listed in the Top 25 for the number of wrongway crashes in 2019, according to ODOT data.

Warren County was ranked No. 20 after reporting six wrong-way crashes that led to three fatalities and three serious injuries.

Butler County, with four crashes, zero fatalities and two serious injuries, ranked No. 22.

Two other area counties, Hamilton and Montgomery, ranked No. 3 and No. 5, respective­ly, according to ODOT.

Local families have been impacted by fatal, wrongway crashes.

In February 2020, a Middletown grandmothe­r, mother and her son were killed in a wrong-way crash on Interstate 75 in Moraine. Betty Davis, 57, Amanda Kidwell, 36, and Brayden Jennings, 6, all from Middletown, were identified as the victims by the Montgomery County Coroner’s Office. Brayden was a student at Wildwood Elementary School.

The crash happened just before 10 p.m. when a semi truck going northbound traveled into the southbound lanes and struck the other vehicle head-on by mile post 48, according to Moraine police.

Two years ago, on St. Patrick’s Day, three members of a Mason family were killed by in a wrong-way crash, also on I-75 in Moraine.

Those killed: Timmy, 51, and Karen Thompson, 50, and Tessa Thompson, a 10-year-old fourth-grader at St. Susanna Parish School.

A wrong-way driver caused the crash, which was reported on I-75 between Dryden Road and South Dixie Drive, according to the Ohio State Highway Patrol.

In March 2020, a Cincinnati man was charged with OVI after he drove a vehicle the wrong way on Ohio 129 in Butler County, a crash that resulted in no injuries.

Tanner Stephens, 19, of Birchwood Court in Cincinnati, entered Ohio 129 at Hampshire Drive about 9:50 a.m. traveling eastbound in the westbound lanes for about seven miles until his gray Honda Civic ended up in the median near the Cincinnati-Dayton Road exit, according to Sgt. Kim Peters.

The vehicle flipped over in the median near the Cincinnati-Dayton Road exit. Two other vehicles were involved, including one that spun out and one that was sideswiped.

The driver who caused a wrong-way crash that killed a Fairfield couple in April 2016 had a blood alcohol level 2.5 times the legal limit in Ohio, said Hamilton County Coroner’s Office.

Kory Wilson, 30, of Springfiel­d Twp., was driving south in the northbound lanes on Interstate 75 early April 8 when he crashed head-on into a vehicle, killing himself and Nazif Shteiwi, 61, and his wife, Halla Odeh Shteiwi, 55.

Wilson’s BAC was .209, the coroner’s office said. Witnesses said Wilson was driving the correct way on I-75 in the Village of Evendale seconds before the crash, then abruptly turned around.

Having a passenger to help navigate, especially in an unfamiliar area, is also helpful in not having a driver get confused or lost while trying to determine the correct way to proceed, Brown said.

“It’s an unfortunat­e thing that happens, and it’s on the rise and we need to try to get a better handle on it, because most of those crashes that happen on those wrong-way (areas), especially on the highways, are usually fatal crashes,” Brown said.

Researcher­s found that the odds of being a wrongway driver increased with alcohol-impairment, older age, and driving without a passenger. AAAFTS research found that six in ten wrongway crashes involved an alcohol-impaired driver.

In Ohio, ODOT is working to prevent these wrong-way crashes by placing wrongway signs lower on the poles, because research has shown that impaired drivers tend to look down instead of up. It’s also installing directiona­l arrows on ramp pavement to indicate the traveled direction.

In 2019, ODOT installed the first wrong-way detection system along a 19-mile stretch of Interstate 71 in Hamilton County. It also have detectors on two ramps: I-670 westbound to Neil Avenue in Columbus and westbound Ohio 2 to West 28th Street in Cleveland, with those devices effectivel­y stopping wrongway drivers.

Those who spot a wrongway driver should dial #677 to alert the Ohio State Highway Patrol, according to OSHP spokeswoma­n and Trooper Jessica McIntyre.

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