3 dead in fiery crash on I-80 near Ottawa, Ill.; Lanes closed
Monday, August 01, 2016 10:25PM
Three people were killed in a fiery five-vehicle crash Monday afternoon on I-80 near Ottawa, Ill., in LaSalle County, according to Illinois State Police.
At about 10:30 p.m., all westbound lanes were closed near mile marker 93, state police said. Traffic was re-routed off the interstate.
The crash occurred at about 1 p.m. and involved three truck tractor/semi-trailers, a straight truck, a tire hauling truck, and a passenger vehicle, two of which caught fire. One of the vehicles involved faced a federal investigation in March that found three separate violations, the I-Team has learned.
There are two fatalities from within the passenger car and one fatality from one of the semi-trucks, police said.
Three of the four trucks involved in the crash were from Illinois, the I-Team has learned.
State police suggest drivers use suggested detour: Westbound I-80 to exit 97, south on County Road 15 to US 6. West on US 6 to north IL 71 and back to I-80 westbound.
Ottawa is about 70 miles southwest of Chicago.
Illinois is among a handful of states that account for more than half of all truck fatalities in the nation. There were nearly 600 fatalities involving large truck accidents in Illinois in the past five years alone.
LaSalle County has among the highest number of truck fatalities in the state.
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Portions of I-80 in Ottawa, Ill., closed due to major crash
Updated 11 mins ago
A major multi-vehicle crash on I-80 near Ottawa, Ill., closed the westbound lanes and one eastbound lane of the expressway.
The crash also involved multiple semis. Lanes are blocked at mile marker 93, according to Illinois State Police.
At least one person is dead as the LaSalle County Coroner's Office has been called to the scene. Several people have been injured.
Update: Both WB I-80 lanes are blocked & one lane of EB I-80 is blocked at MM 93 due to a crash. #ILtraffic— IDOT (@IDOT_Illinois) August 1, 2016
More details to come.
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I-Team: Dissecting the fatal I-80 truck pile-up
Since Monday's crash on I-80, the ABC7 I-Team has been identifying the trucks involved and checking the vehicle histories and safety records.Monday's I-80 chain-reaction crash proved again why Illinois is among a handful of states that account for more than half of all truck fatalities in the nation. There were nearly 600 fatalities involving large truck accidents in Illinois in the past five years alone.
Monday's accident was in LaSalle County, southwest of Chicago, and despite that rural location, LaSalle County has among the highest number of truck fatalities in the state.
The accordion-like accident involved at least four trucks, three from Illinois including a back tractor trailer from Breckenridge Trucking in downstate Wenona, Ill.
One rig was from Allstar Trucking in Channahon, Ill. and a smaller truck that was sandwiched in the middle were from a Midwest tire company called Tredroc.
The front vehicle in the accident is a tractor trailer with Utah license plates registered to a company called Mile Hi Specialty Foods in Denver, Colo. The century old firm transports food products for companies including Chipotle and Starbucks.
While it isn't clear which vehicle may have caused Monday's deadly crash, the I-Team has learned that Mile Hi faced a federal investigation in March that found three separate violations, all related to a driver who shouldn't have been behind the wheel.
According to U.S. Department of Transportation records obtained by the I-Team, the company was cited for false reporting of a driver's hours-on-the-road and allowing a disqualified employee to operate one of the firm's trucks.
In June, Mile Hi was slapped with a nearly $25,000 dollar fine for falsely reporting a driver's hours.
Mile Hi officials did not respond to I-Team requests for information, nor did officials of Breckenridge or Allstar Trucking. The I-Team reached out to Tredroc officials and they declined to comment.
Federal transportation records for those other companies turned up no serious or repeat violations.
ABC7 does not have the ID's of the individual drivers in Monday's accident so their personal records are not known.
The large truck stats are staggering: Illinois averages about 130 deaths each year. The latest U.S. records show more than 3,900 people killed in big rig crashes in a year.