ap

Skip to content
Emergency personnel carry the body of a victim killed Saturday morning in Accokeek, Md., when a car plowed into a crowd that had gathered to watch a drag race on a suburban highway.
Emergency personnel carry the body of a victim killed Saturday morning in Accokeek, Md., when a car plowed into a crowd that had gathered to watch a drag race on a suburban highway.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

ACCOKEEK, Md. — A car plowed into a group of street-racing fans obscured by a cloud of tire smoke on a highway Saturday, killing eight people and scattering bodies in the early-morning darkness.

At least five others were injured in the gruesome wreck along a flat, isolated stretch of highway about 20 miles south of Washington known for illegal races.

Witnesses said about 50 people were gathered before dawn along Route 210 as two cars spun their wheels, kicked up smoke and sped off, said Prince George’s County police Cpl. Clinton Cope land.

Fans had spilled onto the smoky, dark roadway to watch the cars drive away when a white Ford Crown Victoria unexpectedly came up from behind and smashed into them.

“There were just bodies everywhere; it was horrible,” said Crystal Gaines, 27, of Indian Head, whose father was killed.

Police interviewed the Crown Victoria driver, but no charges were pending, Copeland said. Authorities were looking for the drivers of the two cars involved in the race.

The combination of the smoke and the dark morning probably meant the driver could not see the crowd, police said. A tractor-trailer that came by afterward also may have struck someone on the roadside as it tried to avoid the crash scene, according to investigators.

The Crown Victoria, which had a crumpled hood and a partially collapsed roof, ended up down an embankment with one of the victims lodged inside.

“It’s probably one of the worst scenes I’ve seen,” Copeland said. “This is a situation that could have been avoided, and it’s a very tragic situation.”

About 50 people were watching the race, Gaines said, and she saw the Crown Victoria approach without its lights on. She grabbed her daughter, pulling the girl to safety. But her father, William Gaines Sr., 61, had a broken leg and was not able to get away in time. Afterward, she found his body on the road.

“He wasn’t breathing; he wasn’t moving,” Gaines said. “His body was in pieces.”

Police could not confirm whether the car that struck the crowd had its lights on.

The victims’ ages ranged from the 20s to 60s, police said.

Seven people were pronounced dead at the scene, and an eighth died later at a hospital.

Route 210 is a thoroughfare with two lanes in each direction and few traffic lights along the stretch where the accident occurred. The road is flanked by some businesses but has little traffic in the early morning, Copeland said.

RevContent Feed

More in News