Call & Times

20 killed after limousine crashes in upstate New York, authoritie­s say

- By AMY B. WANG

A limousine loaded with revelers headed to a 30th birthday party blew a stop sign at the end of a highway and slammed into an SUV parked outside a store, killing all 18 people in the limo and two pedestrian­s in the deadliest U.S. transporta­tion accident in almost a decade, officials and relatives of the victims said Sunday.

Police said that just before 2 p.m., they received reports of a crash involving two vehicles in Schoharie, about 30 miles west of Albany.

Authoritie­s said a 2001 Ford Excursion limousine traveling southwest on State Route 30 “failed to stop” at an intersecti­on with State Route 30A and flew into the parking lot of the nearby Apple Barrel Country Store and Cafe.

The limousine struck an unoccupied 2015 Toyota Highlander, New York State Police First Deputy Superinten­dent Christophe­r Fiore said at a news conference Sunday. Two pedestrian­s standing nearby were fatally struck, Fiore said.

“There were witnesses on the scene, but just from the evidence discovered at the crash, it was apparent that this was the direction of travel and what happened,” Fiore said.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board said members of its “go team” were at the crash site to investigat­e what happened and possible factors, including road and vehicle conditions.

Police said everyone inside the lim- ousine, including the driver, died in the crash, and all those killed were adults.

Schoharie Town Supervisor Alan Tavenner described how two state highways meet at the bottom of a steep hill at a T-shaped intersecti­on, with a three-way stop. The limo blew past the stop sign at speeds upward of 60 mph, according to witness accounts, Tavenner said.

Tavenner said the New York Department of Transporta­tion outlawed heavy trucks on the hill in recent years because of instances when runaway trucks lost their ability to brake down the steep grade. He said the limo was carrying outof-towners during a busy tourist weekend, Stone Fort Days.

“If somebody’s new to the area or not familiar with the area, I can see how it’d be easy to miss that you’re coming down to the T-intersecti­on and going to have to stop at the bottom of it,” he said.

“Twenty fatalities is just horrific,” NTSB Chairman Robert Sumwalt told reporters Sunday. “This is the most deadly transporta­tion accident in this country since February of 2009.”

It was unclear how many other people, if any, were injured. Police said Sunday that they were not releasing any of the victims’ names, pending autopsies and notificati­on of next of kin.

There were conflictin­g reports about where the passengers in the limousine were headed. The Albany Times Union reported the limo was carrying people from a nearby wedding to the reception. The Associated Press reported that the limousine passengers were on their way to a birthday party. Erin McGowan’s aunt Valerie Abeling confirmed that her 34-year-old niece and her new husband, Shane McGowan, 30, were among the 20 people killed. The couple were married in June. “It’s tragic. Horrible. I can’t even begin to even explain...” Abeling said in an interview from upstate New York where her family was gathered. “Our lives have been changed forever.” The families have obtained little informatio­n about the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the deaths of their loved ones, largely comprised of a close-knit group of high school and neighborho­od friends from Amsterdam, New York. The McGowans were part of the group of 18 people on their way to a brewery in Cooperstow­n, New York, for a party celebratin­g a friend’s 30th birthday, Abeling said. That friend, her husband, and three of her sisters, all of whom were accompanie­d by spouses, were among those killed in the crash, Abeling said. Erin McGowan’s cousin, Patrick Cushing, was also among the dead. Calls to the families of the other victims were not returned, and The Washington Post is withholdin­g their names until they can be confirmed by relatives. Abeling said her daughter, who was invited but did not join the party, recounted that the group had rented “some kind of bus” to go the Cooperstow­n but the vehicle broke down before reaching its destinatio­n. The travel provider then sent a stretch limousine to take the group the rest of the way.

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