The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

6 migrant farmworker­s killed in bus crash in Ark.

Laborers were being taken from Michigan to Texas.

- By Andrew DeMillo and Jill Bleed

LITTLE ROCK, ARK. —A bus ferrying migrant farmworker­s from Michigan to Texas ran off a highway and hit an overpass in Arkansas on Friday, ripping off the roof and ejecting passengers onto the interstate. Six people were killed and six injured; the driver survived.

The crash on Interstate 40 in North Little Rock happened at about 1 a.m., in light rain and fog following a heavy storm, but it wasn’t immediatel­y known what role weather played.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­ion is initially focusing on the possibilit­y of driver fatigue, though in- vestigator­s may focus on other issues once they’re on the scene, spokesman Eric Weiss said.

Roberto Vasquez, 28, of Monroe, Michigan, was behind the wheel when the bus ran off the right side of the highway, struck a wall and hit the bridge. Of those who died, three were thrown from the bus, one was partially ejected and the other two died inside, said Col. Bill Bryant, the head of the Arkansas State Police.

Vasquez has agreed to routine drug and alcohol tests, but there’s no indication he was intoxicate­d, state police Maj. Mike Foster said.

The driver and two other employees of Vasquez Citrus and Hauling, a provider of foreign farm labor through the federal H-2A visa program, had been transporti­ng 19 workers from Monroe, Michigan, to Laredo, Texas.

A woman who an- swered the phone Friday at the Lake Placid, Florida-based company refused to answer questions.

Authoritie­s have not yet released the names or nationalit­ies of those killed in the crash but said the Mexican consulate was helping to contact relatives.

U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officers were called in, but only to help local authoritie­s communicat­e with the Spanish-speaking survivors, according to ICE spokesman Bryan Cox. He said his agency was not pursuing any kind of criminal investigat­ion of the people involved.

The bus had just been sold by Jeff Lawson, who owns Continenta­l Charters in Detroit. Lawson told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette that the buyer “said he needed a second bus to haul people from (Detroit) to Texas... and Florida.” The bill of sale and title to the bus, both dated Oct. 31, declared its value to be $8,000.

Michigan Department of Transporta­tion spokesman Michael Frezell said the 1997 Van Hool bus had passed all of its annual inspection­s since 2009, as required under state law. Frezell said the bus was last inspected in April and that transporta­tion officials did not know what condition it was in when it was sold.

The American Red Cross was providing mental health services to those who escaped injury. “As you can imagine, people are pretty shaken by this,” Regional Communicat­ions Director Brigette Williams said.

Highway officials said the span remained structural­ly sound, even though the impact tore off much of the roof, mostly toward the rear of the bus. Traffic was snarled for hours, but the scene was cleared before daybreak.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY KTHV VIA AP ?? This photo provided by KTHV in Little Rock shows a charter bus damaged after it ran off Interstate 40 and hit a bridge abutment on Friday in North Little Rock Ark. Six people were killed and another six were injured. A heavy storm had recently passed...
CONTRIBUTE­D BY KTHV VIA AP This photo provided by KTHV in Little Rock shows a charter bus damaged after it ran off Interstate 40 and hit a bridge abutment on Friday in North Little Rock Ark. Six people were killed and another six were injured. A heavy storm had recently passed...

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