Close X
Friday, December 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Authorities Say 4 People Killed In Horrific Wrong-Way Crash In Texas Were From Kitchener, Ont.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Feb, 2016 01:21 PM
    KYLE, Texas — Authorities say four people who died in a collision in Texas early Friday morning appear to be from Kitchener, Ont.
     
    Police say the collision was triggered by a vehicle travelling the wrong way on Interstate 35, in the community of Kyle, south of Austin.
     
    Justice of the Peace Beth Smith says two men, a woman and a baby in a minivan died at the scene shortly after 1 a.m. She says two young girls in the minivan were hospitalized with injuries not considered life-threatening, but have since been released into the care of their family, who flew in.
     
    Smith identified the dead as Margaretha Wall Hildebrandt, 27, Heinrich Martens, 31, Gerhard Hiebert Peters, 30, and 16-month-old Jacob Wall Hiebert.
     
    She says firefighters extracted the surviving children from the seats of the car, which had been crushed in the wreck.
     
    Smith says all of the children were properly strapped in car seats.
     
    A spokeswoman from the City of Kyle says at least some of the Canadians appear to be from Kitchener.
     
    She says the wrong-way driver, who was in a Honda Civic, may have consumed alcohol, but they're waiting on toxicology results to confirm that.
     
    Smith says the driver of a Honda Civic is hospitalized in critical condition, and the driver of a pickup also involved in the wreck was treated at the scene.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C.'s Helicopter Wolf Cull Underway In Northeast Region After Kootenay Hunt

    B.C.'s Helicopter Wolf Cull Underway In Northeast Region After Kootenay Hunt
    The Resource Operations Ministry said in a statement Friday that the cull in the South Selkirk region ended recently, but it will not provide current wolf-kill figures until both hunts are complete.

    B.C.'s Helicopter Wolf Cull Underway In Northeast Region After Kootenay Hunt

    Surrey Woman, 46, Charged With Assault After Allegedly Punching People On Skytrain

    Surrey Woman, 46, Charged With Assault After Allegedly Punching People On Skytrain
    Transit Police say 46-year-old Tamara Robertson appeared to be intoxicated and was drinking alcohol when she got on the train Wednesday afternoon.

    Surrey Woman, 46, Charged With Assault After Allegedly Punching People On Skytrain

    Envisioning Health and Technology District with City Centre 2 Groundbreaking

    Envisioning Health and Technology District with City Centre 2 Groundbreaking

    Another City Centre 2 Groundbreaking event was held today following a prior similar session held ...

    Envisioning Health and Technology District with City Centre 2 Groundbreaking

    More Buses, Routes Coming Across B.C. With $324 Million In Provincial Funding

    More Buses, Routes Coming Across B.C. With $324 Million In Provincial Funding
    B.C. Transit, which covers transit everywhere except Metro Vancouver, will receive $324 million in operating costs from the province over the next three years.

    More Buses, Routes Coming Across B.C. With $324 Million In Provincial Funding

    High Tech Test Helps Identify Remains Of B.C. Man Nine Years After He Vanished

    High Tech Test Helps Identify Remains Of B.C. Man Nine Years After He Vanished
    The BC Coroners Service confirms human remains found near that east-central B.C., community are those of Richard Olson.

    High Tech Test Helps Identify Remains Of B.C. Man Nine Years After He Vanished

    Edward Snowden, Man Who Leaked United States Cyber Spying Details To Speak Via Web-Link In B.C.

    Edward Snowden, Man Who Leaked United States Cyber Spying Details To Speak Via Web-Link In B.C.
    Edward Snowden will make the keynote presentation, via web link, as part of a Simon Fraser University program examining the opportunities and dangers of online data gathering.

    Edward Snowden, Man Who Leaked United States Cyber Spying Details To Speak Via Web-Link In B.C.