The Mercury News

Shock after 20 killed in limo crash.

- By Michael Hill and Bob Salsberg

SCHOHARIE, N.Y. >> A limousine loaded with revelers bound for a 30th birthday celebratio­n blew through a stop sign at the end of a highway and slammed into a parked SUV outside a store, killing all 18 people in the limo and two pedestrian­s in the deadliest U.S. transporta­tion accident in nearly a decade, officials and victims’ relatives said Sunday.

The collision turned a relaxed Saturday afternoon into chaos at an upstate New York spot popular with tourists taking in the fall foliage. Relatives said the limousine was carrying four sisters and their friends to a birthday celebratio­n for the youngest.

“They did the responsibl­e thing getting a limo so they wouldn’t have to drive anywhere,” their aunt, Barbara Douglas, said Sunday. She said three of the sisters were with their husbands and identified them as Amy and

Axel Steenburg, Abigail and Adam Jackson, Mary and Rob Dyson, and Allison King.

Douglas said the couples had several children between them; the kids had been left at home.

“They were wonderful girls,” Douglas said. “They’d do anything for you, and they were very close to each other, and they loved their family.”

The 2001 Ford Excursion limousine was traveling

southwest on Route 30 in Schoharie, about 170 miles north of New York City, when it failed to stop at 2 p.m. Saturday at a T-junction with state Route 30A, State Police First Deputy Superinten­dent Christophe­r Fiore said at a news conference in Latham.

The limo went across the road and hit an unoccupied SUV parked at the Apple Barrel Country Store, killing the limousine driver, the 17 passengers and two people outside the vehicle.

The crash “sounded like an explosion,” said Linda Riley of nearby Schenectad­y, who was on a shopping trip with her sisters. She had been in another car parked at the store, saw a body on the ground and heard people start screaming.

The store manager, Jessica Kirby, told The New York Times that the limo was coming down a hill at “probably over 60 mph.” In an email to The Associated Press, she said the junction where the crashed occurred is accident-prone.

“We have had 3 tractor trailer type trucks run through the stop through our driveway and into a field behind the business,” Kirby wrote. “All of these occurred during business hours and could’ve killed someone then.”

She said the state Department of Transporta­tion has banned heavy trucks from the intersecti­on, but there are constant smaller crashes. “More accidents than I can count,” she said.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board is investigat­ing.

“This is one of the biggest losses of life that we’ve seen in a long, long time,” NTSB Chairman Robert Sumwalt said.

It’s the deadliest transporta­tion accident since February 2009, when Colgan Air Flight 3407 crashed in Buffalo, killing 50 people, Sumwalt said.

And it appears to be the deadliest land-vehicle accident since a bus ferrying nursing home patients away from Hurricane Rita caught fire in Texas in 2005, killing 23.

At the news conference, Fiore didn’t comment on the limo’s speed or whether the limo occupants were wearing seat belts. Authoritie­s didn’t release the names of the victims or speculate on what caused the limo to run the stop sign. Autopsies were being conducted.

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 ?? WTEN VIA AP ?? Emergency personnel respond to the scene of a deadly crash in Schoharie, N.Y., on Saturday.
WTEN VIA AP Emergency personnel respond to the scene of a deadly crash in Schoharie, N.Y., on Saturday.

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