Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Deadly Crash At Toronto's Highway 407 May Have Involved Mechanical Failure: Police

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Nov, 2018 05:48 PM
    TORONTO — A deadly crash on a busy toll highway north of Toronto may have been caused by a mechanical failure in one of the vehicles involved, Ontario Provincial Police said Thursday.
     
     
    Sgt. Kerry Schmidt said a malfunction on a fuel truck is among the primary theories police are investigating as they probe the fiery collision that killed two men Wednesday afternoon on Highway 407 in Vaughan, Ont.
     
     
    While human factors are also part of the investigation and no theories have been eliminated, Schmidt said mechanical issues are currently viewed among the most likely causes.
     
     
    "One of the possibilities is that the vehicle had a ... malfunction such as a suspension or tire blowout which caused the vehicle to veer," Schmidt said.
     
     
    A 41-year-old fuel truck driver from Brampton, Ont., and a 49-year-old man from Mississauga, Ont., who was driving a passenger vehicle were killed in the collision, which sent smoke billowing over the area for several kilometres and shuttered a stretch of the highway for more than 12 hours.
     
     
    Schmidt said the men's identities will not be released immediately.
     
     
    Police had previously said that the westbound fuel tanker jumped the median and collided with an eastbound vehicle, but Schmidt said further investigation has shed new light on events.
     
     
    Both vehicles were in fact heading westbound in the seconds before the crash, he said.
     
     
    "I think the truck veered off hard left, took the car with it as it came over," he said. "They both ended up on the eastbound side."
     
     
    Both vehicles were consumed by flames when they collided, Schmidt said, adding the extensive damage will pose additional challengers for investigators. On Thursday, marks where the vehicles mounted and crossed the median were visible on the concrete barrier.
     
     
    Other officials offered their own accounts of the blaze caused by the collision.
     
     
    "When our firefighters arrived, they weren't able to get close to it because of the heat coming off of it," said deputy fire Chief Andrew Zvanitajs, a member of the Vaughan Fire and Rescue Service.
     
     
    It took two hours to extinguish the blaze, officials said. 
     
     
    Mississauga resident Robert Kostiuk said he was returning home from work in Pickering, Ont., when he saw a vehicle ahead of him heading toward the median.
     
     
    "When I saw it driving sideways, I knew that something was wrong," said Kostiuk, who recorded the crash on his dashboard camera and posted the video to YouTube.
     
     
    Schmidt said there was some concern about fuel spilling into a nearby waterway. Officials from the provincial Environment Ministry were called in to assess the scene.
     
     
    Highway 407 reopened to regular traffic at roughly 6 a.m. Thursday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Taxi Drivers Seek Up To $1B From Quebec For Allowing Uber To Operate

    Taxi Drivers Seek Up To $1B From Quebec For Allowing Uber To Operate
    MONTREAL — Quebec cab drivers have been given the green light to sue the provincial government, alleging it stood by as Uber moved into their market.

    Taxi Drivers Seek Up To $1B From Quebec For Allowing Uber To Operate

    Environment Canada Warnings For Inner South Coast, Part Of Northwestern B.C.

    VANCOUVER — Residents of British Columbia's Bulkley Valley are greeting winter-like conditions while those in parts of the inner south coast are splashing through a deluge as Environment Canada posts weather warnings for those regions. 

    Environment Canada Warnings For Inner South Coast, Part Of Northwestern B.C.

    UVic Study Finds Homeless, Vulnerable, Finally Get Care When At Death's Door

    UVic Study Finds Homeless, Vulnerable, Finally Get Care When At Death's Door
    VICTORIA — The lives of 25 homeless or marginally housed people in Victoria only started to get better when they were close to death, says a University of Victoria study released Thursday.

    UVic Study Finds Homeless, Vulnerable, Finally Get Care When At Death's Door

    Justin Trudeau Announces $10M In Funding To Build Nuclear Medicine Hub In Vancouver

    Justin Trudeau Announces $10M In Funding To Build Nuclear Medicine Hub In Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced federal funding Thursday to build a hub for nuclear medicine at Canada's national particle accelerator in Vancouver.

    Justin Trudeau Announces $10M In Funding To Build Nuclear Medicine Hub In Vancouver

    B.C. Police Watchdog Opens 4 Investigations Involving Death Or Serious Harm

    B.C. Police Watchdog Opens 4 Investigations Involving Death Or Serious Harm
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's police watchdog is investigating four separate incidents since Sunday involving police and people who have died or suffered serious harm.

    B.C. Police Watchdog Opens 4 Investigations Involving Death Or Serious Harm

    BC Premier John Horgan Says He's Already Mailed-in His Electoral Reform Ballot, Votes Yes

    BC Premier John Horgan Says He's Already Mailed-in His Electoral Reform Ballot, Votes Yes
    Premier John Horgan says he has already voted in British Columbia's Nov. 30 mail-in electoral reform referendum.

    BC Premier John Horgan Says He's Already Mailed-in His Electoral Reform Ballot, Votes Yes

    PrevNext