East Bay Times

Attempt to pass a tanker may have led to the deadly crash

- By John O'connor and Colleen Slevin

SPRINGFIEL­D, ILL. >> The tanker truck crash in central Illinois that killed five people may have started when another vehicle tried to pass the chemical-laden truck, a federal transporta­tion official said Sunday.

The tanker truck was carrying caustic anhydrous ammonia when it jackknifed Friday night, and hit a utility trailer parked just off the highway, according to Tom Chapman, a member of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board. The tank carrying anhydrous ammonia hit the trailer hitch of the other vehicle, which punched a six-inch hole in the chemical container, Chapman said during news conference Sunday.

Chapman said the tanker truck's driver pulled to the right and ran off the road as it traveled west on U.S. 40 in Teutoplis, a small community about 110 miles northeast of St. Louis.

“It happened in a relatively short period of time,” Chapman said. “This was a rapid sequence of events.”

The accident occurred about 8:40 p.m. local time, Chapman said, revising the 9:25 p.m. time authoritie­s originally gave. The crash spilled roughly half the truck's 7,500 gallon load. The rest was drained and moved to a “secure location” for the NTSB's investigat­ion, authoritie­s said late Saturday, as area residents were allowed to return to their homes after being evacuated.

Effingham County Coroner Kim Rhodes said the five dead included three from the same family: one adult and two children under 12. The other two were adult motorists from out of state, Rhodes said.

Additional­ly, five people were airlifted to hospitals, their conditions unknown.

Names of the victims were not released, nor would authoritie­s discuss causes of death.

About 500 residents within a 1-mile radius of the crash site were evacuated after the accident, including northeaste­rn parts of Teutopolis.

Emergency crews worked overnight after the accident on Friday trying to control the plume from the leak and struggled to get near the crash site. Private and federal environmen­tal contractor­s were summoned to recommend a cleanup procedure in Teutopolis, a town of 1,600 people.

The accident caused “a large plume, cloud of anhydrous ammonia on the roadway that caused terribly dangerous air conditions in the northeast area of Teutopolis,” Effiningha­m County Sheriff Paul Kuhns said. “Because of these conditions, the emergency responders had to wait. They had to mitigate the conditions before they could really get to work on it, and it was a fairly large area.”

Although not strong, crews working overnight struggled against shifting wind.

“The wind changed three or four different times on us,” said Tim McMahon, chief of the Teutopolis Fire Protection District. “That's another reason we got crews out in different places, reporting back on which way the wind's going.”

 ?? NEWSNATION-WTWO VIA AP ?? Emergency responders work the scene of tanker truck crash in Teutopolis, Ill., Saturday.
NEWSNATION-WTWO VIA AP Emergency responders work the scene of tanker truck crash in Teutopolis, Ill., Saturday.

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