Los Angeles Times

Slumber, then cries of anguish

Battered and bandaged, crash survivors recall the moment of impact.

- By Louis Sahagun and Doug Smith

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. — They came out of the emergency room in wheelchair­s, one by one.

In the waiting room they gravitated together, recognizin­g by their battered faces and bandaged limbs fellow victims of the bus crash that killed 13 people near Desert Hot Springs early Sunday.

Their voices swelled in animated Spanish as they went over details of the accident and tried to understand why they had lived when others died.

“Thank the Lord,” said Dora Lamus, 49, of Los Angeles, looking upward with her hands pressed together as if in prayer.

Lamus had a black eye, a large scab on her upper lip and a stack of ice on her lap to ease the pain.

She was among five patients who lingered after being treated and released at Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage.

As they waited for rides to their homes in Los Angeles, they relived those terrifying moments when their slumber on the bus ride home from a night of gambling was broken by cries of anguish.

Taking a deep breath and wiping away tears, Miguel Martinez, 66, recalled the moment of impact:

“The truck was moving

very slowly,” he said in Spanish. “Our driver slammed on the brakes, then the bus skidded for several yards before crashing into the truck.”

His recollecti­on differed from the official account. The California Highway Patrol reported that the skid marks were made by the truck’s tires thrust forward by the impact of the bus hitting it from behind.

What Martinez saw next he’ll never forget. “Seconds later, people in the bus were screaming for help,” Martinez said. “The front six rows, where 12 people had been sitting, were squashed together. Everyone, dead and alive, was covered with blood.

“The right side of one man’s face was peeled back.”

Martinez was among a dozen survivors transporte­d to Eisenhower Medical Center after the crash.

Like most, Ana Car, 61, was asleep shortly before daybreak, when the bus crashed into the trailer of a big-rig truck on the westbound 10 Freeway.

She and other survivors credited anonymous Good Samaritans for helping them escape even before firefighte­rs arrived and placed ladders into the bus windows. Sitting in a wheelchair, wincing in pain, Car said most of the impromptu rescuers worked in silence. “Except to say, ‘It’ll be OK. You’ll be all right.’ Over and over.”

Rescuers eventually helped her out of the bus, she said, adding: “All I could do was stand by the side of the road and cry and cry because there were still so many others trapped inside.”

Jose Guerrero, 65, said he too was assisted by motorists who stopped.

“I was in the back of the bus sleeping,” Guerrero said. “I woke up on the floor with blood on my forehead and upper lip. Everyone was screaming for help. I was among the first helped out of the bus. Passersby who had parked near the scene of the accident helped me out of the window.”

“I’m one of the lucky ones,” said Martinez, who suffered scrapes, cuts and bruises on his face, arms and back. “I was in the back of the bus.”

Eisenhower spokesman Lee Rice said Sunday afternoon that the hospital treated 12 crash victims with minor injuries. Nine had been discharged, one was taken to Desert Regional Medical Center in Palm Springs in good condition, and two in good condition were still being treated.

By 4 p.m., the first of the survivors had begun their journeys home.

‘I was in the back of the bus sleeping. I woke up on the floor with blood on my forehead and upper lip.’ — Jose Guerrero, tour bus passenger

louis.sahagun @latimes.com Twitter: @LouisSahag­un doug.smith @latimes.com Twitter: @LATDoug

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? A CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY PATROL officer collects personal items into bags at the site where a tour bus crashed into the back of a big rig, killing 13 people.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times A CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY PATROL officer collects personal items into bags at the site where a tour bus crashed into the back of a big rig, killing 13 people.
 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? BROKEN BUS SEATS and other debris are removed from the accident scene. A spokesman for Eisenhower Medical Center said Sunday afternoon that the hospital treated 12 crash victims with minor injuries.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times BROKEN BUS SEATS and other debris are removed from the accident scene. A spokesman for Eisenhower Medical Center said Sunday afternoon that the hospital treated 12 crash victims with minor injuries.

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