Calif. SUV crash may have been on purpose
Investigators believe SUV’s plunge off cliff was not accidental
The vehicle that was carrying a married couple and at least three of their adopted children showed no signs of slowing down or accelerating before reaching the cliff, investigators say.
The crash that killed a married couple and at least three of their adopted children after their vehicle plunged off a California cliff last week may not have been an accident, according to media reports.
Greg Baarts, acting assistant chief of the California Highway Patrol’s northern division, told NBC affiliate KGW8 that investigators have “reason to believe . . . that the crash was intentional.” Baarts, who was not immediately available for comment Sunday evening, told KGW8 that the finding was based on preliminary information.
Earlier reports indicated that the speedometer of the SUV that authorities said was carrying the family of eight — the two parents and their six adopted children — was “pinned” at 90 mph when it went over the cliff on the Pacific Coast Highway. Fox affiliate KPTV in Oregon reported that this indicates the vehicle remained in motion after it fell and hit the rocks 100 feet below.
Investigators also did not find any marks showing that the vehicle either accelerated or slowed down before it reached the cliff or any evidence that it crashed into the embankment as it “traversed towards the tidal zone below,” according the documents cited by KPTV.
Killed are the two mothers, Jennifer Jean Hart — who was driving — and Sarah Margaret Hart, both 38, and at least three of their adopted children. The other three are missing and are feared to be dead.
The death of a family that had once captured the world’s attention has left troubling questions about what may have preceded the Monday afternoon crash at the ocean overlook near Westport, Calif., a small community about 180 miles north of San Francisco. Child services officials in Washington state, where the family lived, have confirmed that they began investigating the Harts over “alleged abuse or neglect” shortly before the accident.
The Washington Department of Social and Health Services said it tried unsuccessfully to contact the family on three occasions, first on March 23, three days before the crash, according to a statement. The agency tried again March 26 — the day of the crash — and Tuesday.
“We have not made any findings in this investigation and we had no prior history with this family,” the agency said. “We are working with all involved law enforcement agencies on their respective investigations.”
Investigators are looking into the possibility of suicide, although police had said earlier that they have no reason to suspect that the crash was intentional. KPTV reported that investigators have secured a warrant to search the family’s home, including documents such as bank and cellphone records, credit card statements and suicide notes.
First responders immediately found the bodies of Jennifer and Sarah Hart and their children Markis, 19, Jeremiah, 14, and Abigail, 14. The others — Devonte, 15, Hannah, 16, and Sierra, 12 — remain unaccounted for.
The family had lived in a suburb of Portland, Ore., before they moved north across the Columbia River to Woodland, Wash. Authorities said the family left Oregon to escape intense scrutiny that began in 2014, when Devonte Hart was photographed sobbing in the arms of a white police officer in Portland, where people had gathered to support police protests in Ferguson, Mo.