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Last post 4 years ago by DrafterX. 13 replies replies.
Colorado semi truck accident...
opelmanta1900 Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 01-10-2012
Posts: 13,954
No alcohol or drugs suspected, wasn't an intentional act, but the driver is being held on vehicular homicide charges...

Talking on the phone? Looking at porn? Sleeping? Had to have been something I would think... The police said even if they find the truck had faulty breaks they still have "enough evidence" for the vehicular homicide charges...
rfenst Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,112
negligent homicide
opelmanta1900 Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 01-10-2012
Posts: 13,954
Can negligent homicide be vehicular homicide? Seems like it could, but I ask because they've been very specific that he's charged with multiple counts of vehicular homicide...

Also, if it was a matter of the truck being over loaded or brakes not properly maintained, would they still call that vehicular homicide or would they just call it negligent homicide?
DrafterX Offline
#4 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,508
He's prolly an illegal... They do stuff like this... Mellow
Mrs. dpnewell Offline
#5 Posted:
Joined: 08-23-2014
Posts: 1,373
On another board, folks from the area stated that in that stretch of highway, you're coming down off a mountain. It could very well be that his brakes where gone.

On the southern section of Rt 77 in Virginia (a few miles from my new place in NC) there is a nasty, winding 8 mile decline. There are truck run-away ramps every mile. During my many trips down there, I've seen multiple trucks buried up to their axles on the run-away ramps. I've also seen several that had gone off the side of the highway.

David
Mrs. dpnewell Offline
#6 Posted:
Joined: 08-23-2014
Posts: 1,373
Same thing happened a few weeks ago on Rt. 77 in NC. Traffic had stopped for construction, and a tractor-trailer slammed into the stopped traffic, resulting in the death a couple from West Virginia. It was a flat section of highway, so I'm assuming the driver was asleep or not paying attention.
DrafterX Offline
#7 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,508
Was he an illegal..?? Huh
tonygraz Offline
#8 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2008
Posts: 20,175
I heard that Drafter was an illegal.
DrafterX Offline
#9 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,508
No way man...Not talking
delta1 Offline
#10 Posted:
Joined: 11-23-2011
Posts: 28,754
if they charge you for vehicular homicide, you done something illegal, so .... yes, he's illegal....keeping in mind the presumption...
tamapatom Offline
#11 Posted:
Joined: 03-19-2015
Posts: 7,381
Drafter...they have renamed the runaway truck ramps to runaway truck sanctuaries.
opelmanta1900 Offline
#12 Posted:
Joined: 01-10-2012
Posts: 13,954
https://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/crime/affidavit-driver-involved-in-deadly-i-70-crash-was-driving-erratically-going-more-than-80-mph

GOLDEN, Colo. – The driver of a semi going eastbound on I-70 near Colorado Mills Parkway was driving erratically and at a speed of more than 80 mph before causing a deadly and fiery crash that left four people dead and many others injured Thursday afternoon, according to an arrest affidavit.


Rogel Lazaro Aguilera-Mederos, who was interviewed by police after he was released from the hospital, said he was driving the semi on eastbound I-70 when he lost control of the vehicle after his brakes failed and that he saw his speedometer was at 85 miles per hour as he had to maneuver to the right shoulder to avoid stopped traffic.

The affidavit states Aguilera-Mederos saw the right shoulder was blocked by another stopped semi, so he swerved backed into the lanes of stopped traffic and closed his eyes before the crash, thinking he was about to die.

The 23-year-old U.S. resident from Cuba survived and was able to escape the blaze that had already ignited. He was taken to St. Anthony’s Hospital in Lakewood for non-serious injuries.


The affidavit then details accounts from witnesses who say they saw the semi speeding past them near the buffalo herd overlook at the Lookout Mountain exit.


Jonathan Valdez and Pedro Olvera, who were in a work truck heading east on I-70, told police they followed the semi and recorded its movements with a cell phone camera “because of how the semi was driving” near the Genesee exit. They also told police they noticed a trail of fluid coming from the rear of the semi.

According to the affidavit, the men saw the semi driving in all three lanes, and, at one point, the semi even forced a pickup truck off the left side of the highway. Video obtained by police shows the semi pass an emergency runaway truck ramp.

Olvera told police his work truck can only go up to 80 miles per hour and that he was not able to keep up with the accelerating semi. Both men eventually caught up to the semi and saw it had been in the fiery collision.

The probable cause statement also states video from the witnesses was reviewed by police, which shows the semi driving in the far-right lane of the highway “under a clearly marked yellow caution sign” which reads “RUNAWAY TRUCK RAMP 2000 FEET” with an arrow pointing toward the far right lane. It also states there was a speed limit sign with a clearly marked speed limit of 65 mph for personal vehicles and a 45 mph speed limit for commercial vehicles.

Video obtained by police shows the semi continuing eastbound, drifting from the far-right lane (lane 3) to the line left of it (lane 2) twice. The video then shows the semi driving past the runaway ramp that is “clearly marked with a yellow sign saying “RUNAWAY TRUCK RAMP.””

In the arrest affidavit, police stated the semi had a "free and unobstructed" path to the runaway ramp on the right side, “but instead swerves left from lane #3 to lane #1, … then forces a pickup truck that is in lane #1 off the left side of the highway.” Police state that truck drove off the roadway in to the dirt road on the side of the road to avoid getting hit by the semi.

In the video, the affidavit states, the semi is seen continuing eastbound and driving under another yellow cautionary sign that read “TRUCKERS YOU ARE NOT DOWN YET. ANOTHER 1 ½ MILES OF STEEP GRADE AND SHARP CURVES TO GO.” At this point, police said, the video ends.

Arresting documents show Lakewood police then spoke with another witness who saw what happened moments before the deadly crash.


Brett Dickerson was reportedly driving east on I-70 when he saw the semi speeding so fast he decided to take a cell phone video. The battery on his phone was dead, so Dickerson pulled along the side of the road to “gesture to the driver,” the affidavit states.

The affidavit states the witness realized something was wrong when he saw that the driver of the semi was “wide-eyed” and had a terrified look on his face. He told police he noticed his own vehicle was traveling at 84 mph and the semi was “still pull away at a higher speed.”

The witness told police he watched the semi drive from across the left lane onto the right shoulder and pass stopped vehicles; a short time later, he came across the same semi at the collision point.

Investigators also spoke to a fourth witness who was driving a UPS semi-truck that was stopped in traffic on I-70 just west of Denver Parkway in lane #2.


Kevin Kirkpatrick told police he saw the semi drive past him on the right side of the highway at an estimated speed of 100 mph just before the collision with the other vehicles occurred, according to the affidavit.

The probable cause statement states police then went to St. Anthony’s Hospital to speak to several victims of the crash.

One of the victims was going east on I-70 in stop and go traffic when she was hit. The victim told police she heard a loud noise and was propelled forward with a Jeep being pushed on top of her car.

A man, who was not identified, helped the woman out of her vehicle and both the man and the victim ran away from the flames. The victim was treated at the hospital for a severe laceration to her forehead.


MORE: I-70 crash victim praises Good Samaritans, says she's 'lucky to be alive'

Another victim told police he was driving a loaded 18-wheeler on eastbound I-70 at Denver West Parkway when he checked his brakes and found them hot. He told police that as he waited for his brakes to cool, he heard the crash and saw a fireball in his rearview mirrors. The victim told police the back of his truck was hit and the fireball surrounded him, propelling him forward inside his cab. He was treated for contusions to his right knee.

The affidavit then states investigators found at least four “unidentifiable and unrecognizable” people trapped inside their cars in the aftermath of the crash.

The coroner has not been able to identify any of the victims.


Aguilera-Mederos was taken from the hospital to the Lakewood Police Department where he agreed to speak to investigators about the deadly crash. During the interview, Aguilera-Mederos claimed he was only driving at 25 mph in the same area that the video showed him driving out of control while passing the runaway truck signs and ramp and running a vehicle off the highway, the affidavit states.

The driver then claimed that he was only going 45 mph as he approached 6th Ave., and that he tried to brake but noticed his brakes were not working. Additionally, he told police the downhill grade caused the semi to accelerate and that he tried to activate the emergency brakes “without success,” according to the affidavit.

He then told police he did not want to roll the semi so he would not drive off the road, adding he moved to the right shoulder to avoid stopped traffic in all three lanes as his semi reached a speed of 85 miles per hour on the speedometer.

The affidavit states Aguilera-Mederos realized he was about to rear end another semi that was already stopped on the right shoulder and he chose to drive back into the lanes of stopped traffic.


He told police he thought he was going to die as he closed his eyes before hitting nearly a dozen stopped vehicles. The document then states Aguilera-Mederos crawled from the truck as the fire started and spread to other vehicles.
DrafterX Offline
#13 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,508
That Bassard..!! Mad
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