Springfield News-Sun

2 dead after driver fleeing police crashes

2 others hurt after 11-mile pursuit ends in ‘horrendous’ scene.

- By Parker Perry, Kristen Spicker and Jen Balduf Staff Writer

Troy police chased a fleeing driver about 11 miles Tuesday morning before the 19-year-old man reportedly ran a red light and struck another car, killing himself and the woman driving the other vehicle.

The woman’s young daughter, strapped into a car seat, survived the crash, and neighbors who came to help the child described as the scene as horrendous.

Troy police identified the driver of the fleeing car as Jalen Alexander, 19, of Troy. Chelsey Vollmer, 32, of Dayton, drove the other vehicle, which was not involved in the chase. Both were pronounced dead at the scene.

A woman riding inside Alexander’s vehicle was taken to Miami Valley Hospital for care, and Vollmer’s infant child was taken Dayton Children’s for treatment. Their conditions were not available Tuesday evening.

“We had to extricate victims out of the cars,” Bethel Twp. (Miami County) Fire Chief Andy Erhart said. “Once the extraction­s were complete, the transports to the hospital took place.”

Troy police said the incident started around 8 a.m. when officers in the area of Stonyridge Avenue and Imperial Court were looking for Alexander. They said he was wanted for felonious assault and child abuse/endangerin­g and also had a warrant in Greene County for a court order violation.

“The officer was aware that the suspect was in possession of a 9mm

Glock pistol when stopped by Troy officers on March 7,” read a release from Troy police.

An officer saw a vehicle that he believed to belong to Alexander and attempted to stop him, but the suspect fled, eventually going south on state Route 202.

The Miami County Sheriff ’s Office attempted to stop the car using stop sticks at the intersecti­on of Ohio 202 and Ross Road. However, the suspect continued on until he crashed into another car at U.S. 40.

The Ohio State Highway Patrol is investigat­ing the crash.

Neighbors rushed outside to discover what some called a “horrendous crash.”

Jennifer Cain, a neighbor who lives next door to the scene, said she heard a loud crash and raced outside even as debris continued to fall to the ground.

“I immediatel­y went over to that vehicle, and as I went around, I saw a woman that did not look alive and I heard a baby cry, and I stopped and I listened again and heard the baby cry again,” she said.

She said she waved the police over to the vehicle because of the baby, and first responders got the girl out of the car. Cain asked if she could stay with the girl, and she was allowed to.

“I had my husband get a blanket,” Cain said. “She was alert, she was fussing. She had a little bump on her head and just a couple of scratches. … When she would go close her eyes, I would just stroke her cheek and hold her hand and was talking to her, telling her that she was a good girl and that she was all right.”

Cain said other neighbors also comforted the child while on scene and made sure someone was with the baby until paramedics were able to take the child to Dayton Children’s Hospital. She said she believes the child’s car seat saved her life.

Glenn Linn said that Vollmer’s car hit his porch.

“I seen a crushed-up car and went out to the car and hollered if anybody was OK, and nobody answered, so I went inside and dialed 911,” Linn said. “The next thing I heard was sirens.”

“It sounded like it went on for five minutes, but it probably went on for seconds,” Linn said. “It sounded like forever because I heard the crash, and then I got up and went to the door and she was coming in the driveway so it was a long type of crash. I guess she must have been rolling or something like that because it was just horrendous.”

Jason Gregory was waiting with his daughter for her school bus and said he saw a car he thought was going 100 mph before the crash.

“As soon as I said ‘Wow, that car is flying,’ boom. I looked up and I could see the light was red where it was coming through,” Gregory said.

Troy Police Chief Shawn McKinney did not respond Tuesday to questions about police chase policies and procedures and about the chase.

Cedarville University Associate Professor of Criminal Justice Steve Meacham said that, generally, the decision to engage in a police chase is made on a case-by-case basis. He said it’s important to remember that the decisions of the suspect started the incident.

“That person had all the reasons to pull over and stop and chose to flee,” Meacham said. “That person’s actions put people’s lives in danger.

There’s the responsibi­lity as far as two people are dead today. It’s a very tragic situation,” he said.

If the person decided to pull over and comply with police, the crash wouldn’t have happened, he said. He said police have a tough and dangerous job.

Tuesday’s crash wasn’t the first time in recent years in which an innocent person was killed as part of a police chase in Miami County. In 2017, Anthony Hufford, 28, of Englewood, was struck and killed.

In that case, two Troy police officers and two Tipp City officers pursued a stolen pickup truck. The Troy officers and one Tipp City officer ended their pursuit, according to reports at the time, but communicat­ion issues caused the second Tipp City officer to continue.

The fleeing pickup crashed into Hufford’s vehicle. Officers were about 30 to 40 seconds away from the crash, according to reports.

 ??  ?? The crash was reported around 8:07 a.m. Tuesday at the intersecti­on of U.S. 40 and Ohio 202 in Bethel Twp.
The crash was reported around 8:07 a.m. Tuesday at the intersecti­on of U.S. 40 and Ohio 202 in Bethel Twp.

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