The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Car hits tow truck at Lorain High School

Unexpected crash happens during police demonstrat­ion

- By Keith Reynolds kreynolds@morningjou­rnal.com @MJ_KReynolds on Twitter

A staged crash investigat­ion turned into an actual investigat­ion May 2 when the Lorain Police Department crashed some cars at Lorain High School.

The crash was part of the police department’s and Lorain City Schools’ safe driving initiative in preparatio­n for prom season.

While many schools simply park a busted car on its front lawn in an effort to give students a visual reminder of the dangers of drunk driving, the police department decided to use the lesson to teach the Lorain High School Police Explorers about crash reconstruc­tion.

The lesson started as planned after the school was dismissed and the students in the explorers program were well out of the way of any action. Lorain police Officer Kyle Gelenius drove a junked Nissan Altima into a life sized dummy.

While the students looked on from across the parking lot, Gelenius struck

the blue dummy, wearing a black Lorain police baseball cap, on the passenger side of the car’s hood.

The dummy, which was built to be comparable to a human body, rode the hood briefly before falling beneath the front passenger wheel.

Students then were given the task of measuring skid marks on the pavement,

the resting position of the dummy and where the hat landed.

Gelenius walked the students through how inertia affects the location of the pedestrian, in this case a dummy, and their effects, in this case the hat.

Once the scene was processed, the officers set up the next staged crash.

This time, rather than

put an officer’s safety at risk, the Altima was strapped to the department’s dive truck with the intention of it being pulled so that it would strike a junked Mercury Sable.

The students were moved even further from the action, and an officer began pulling the Altima toward the Sable.

Once the Altima started

moving, the strap slipped beneath the tires of the Sable giving the Altima more freedom of travel.

The Altima barely clipped the bumper of the Sable before ultimately crashing into a tow truck belonging to Ernie’s Towing, which was used to bring the junked car to the lot.

Reviewing a video taken by The Morning Journal, a female can be heard after the crash asking, “Wait a minute, was that supposed to happen?”

“Nope!” a male voice can be heard replying.

Lorain police Officer Jake Morris said the students were never in any danger, as the police department was prepared for this possibilit­y.

“We cordoned off the area quite well, made sure everyone was well out of harm’s way while watching the actual demonstrat­ion,” Morris said. “We’ve been out of here since 11:30 a.m. just ensuring that the area was safe.”

Morris highlighte­d the police department’s insistence that no students or personnel were anywhere near where they could have been harmed.

Gelenius said the demonstrat­ion didn’t go as they expected, but that was part of the lesson.

“You never know what to expect in crashes,” he said. “They were able to see a crash, just not the one they planned.”

Carter Muniz, 15, of Lorain, a freshman at the school, said he thought the experience was “crazy.”

“I thought it would be louder,” Carter said.

He said he believed there would be more debris flying all over the parking lot.

“I was glad we were a good distance away,” Carter said.

 ?? ERIC BONZAR — THE MORNING JOURNAL ?? Lorain police Officer Kyle Gelenius re-enacts a “car vs. pedestrian” crash during a live demonstrat­ion with the Lorain High School Police Explorers, May 2, 2018. The department recreated two scenarios to promote smart decisions during prom season, and...
ERIC BONZAR — THE MORNING JOURNAL Lorain police Officer Kyle Gelenius re-enacts a “car vs. pedestrian” crash during a live demonstrat­ion with the Lorain High School Police Explorers, May 2, 2018. The department recreated two scenarios to promote smart decisions during prom season, and...

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