SCHOOL BUS CRASH
REPORTS 2004
Tour Bus
Crash in Arkansas Kills at Least 15
October 9, 2004
MARION,
Ark. (AP) -- The lone bus belonging to a mom-and-pop tour operator careened
off an interstate and overturned, killing 15 Chicago-area travelers on their
way to a Mississippi casino. Witnesses told police the bus, which carried
family and friends of the tour company owner, was drifting.
| The bus was about 30 miles
short of its destination in Tunica, Miss., when the crash happened about
5 a.m. Saturday on Interstate 55 in northeastern Arkansas, near Memphis,
Tenn. Thirty-one people were
aboard, and the remaining 16 passengers all were injured, many
critically. Some of the dead were found crushed beneath the bus after
wrecker crews pulled it upright, state police spokesman Bill Sadler
said. |
 |
Among the dead was the bus owner's brother,
who had been driving. The owner's wife, stepson and niece also died. The
driver, Herbert Walters, was believed to be in his 60s.
Witnesses told
police the bus drifted off the road near a point where the interstate veers
to take travelers into Memphis.
The bus, "just kind of faded over there,"
said Cpl. Mickey Strayhorn of the Arkansas State Police. "There was not
really any erratic driving before this occurred."
A light mist was falling at the time of the
crash, but visibility did not appear to be significantly limited, police
said.
The impact tore off a section of the bus'
roof, and emergency workers had to shear off the rest of the top to reach a
trapped passenger.
State police had a
partial list of passengers and were going through debris to identify the
others.
Sadler said 14 people died at the scene.
Hospitals reported receiving a total of 17 people, including one who later
died.
Sandy Snell, spokeswoman for The Medical Center at Memphis, said that
hospital was treating eight victims, including three in very critical
condition, three in critical condition, and two with serious injuries.
Witnesses and survivors told police the trip
was uneventful, then "the next thing we knew, we were off the road," Sadler
said.
The bus went down a slight incline and
flipped as it cut through a ditch, stopping about 100 yards from the
highway.
Roosevelt Walters, who operated Walters
Charter and Tours of Chicago, said his wife was aboard the bus because she
had organized the trip for a group of friends, retirees and teachers. He
said his brother, Herbert Walters, was driving.
Within hours of learning about the crash, Walters also learned that his wife
and brother had been killed.
"This thing that happened, nobody has an
answer for. All we can do is direct them to God," said the Rev. Curtis Reed,
who was serving as a family spokesman.
Police cautioned that investigators may not
know what happened for weeks. "They'll be so many things they'll need to
look at," Sadler said.
Both Roosevelt and Herbert Walters held
commercial driver's licenses issued to drivers of large trucks and tour
buses, said Dave Druker, a spokesman for the Illinois secretary of state's
office.
Records dating back about 10 years indicated both had clean driving records,
with no tickets or violations, Druker said.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration also had no record of accidents or inspections of Walters'
bus company during the last two years, said spokesman David Longo. The
company's last comprehensive safety review by the federal agency was in
1987, when it received a "satisfactory" rating.
Walters said he inspected the vehicle, his
only tour bus, on Friday and found it to be in good mechanical shape.
The group left from his home Friday evening
and had planned to spend the weekend at a casino, then return to Chicago by
Monday night.
The bus made the trip twice a year, and most of those in the group knew each
other. Walters said his stepson, his sister-in-law, a cousin and his
neighbors were also aboard.
Fredonia Gay, who lives three miles from the
crash site, was awakened by passing medical helicopters. "The helicopters
kept coming over my house, and I knew it would be something tragic," she
said. "They kept coming and coming."
The National Transportation Safety Board
planned to join the investigation.
The accident occurred about 13 miles from
Marion, Ark., just outside Memphis, Tenn.
By CARYN ROUSSEAU
Associated Press Writer
Cause Sought for Fatal Arkansas Tour Bus Crash
back to
Crash Reports 2004

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