WORLD OF CRISIS

Aug 16, 2010

Race Car Crashes into Crowd, 8 Dead

Authorities identify 7 of the 8 killed in Calif. race car crash

Workers push an overturned off-road race truck Sunday after it went out of control and ran into a crowd of spectators during a race in Lucerne Valley, Calif., on Saturday.

LUCERNE VALLEY, Calif. -- Authorities said eight people were killed and 10 injured Saturday evening when a driver competing in the California 200 desert race in Lucerne Valley lost control of his off-roader, which went airborne and landed on top of spectators. The driver, who was uninjured, and seven of the eight people killed were identified Sunday by officials.

The driver "got airborne and, when he landed, rolled over straight into the spectators," said Officer Joaquin Zubieta of the California Highway Patrol, the agency investigating the crash. "People didn't have much of a chance . . . to get out of the way."

Six spectators died at the scene. Nine others were airlifted to hospitals, and two of them died later in the evening, Zubieta said. Of those hurt, five suffered major injuries and five had minor injuries, officials said. Brett M. Sloppy of San Marcos, Calif., was the driver of the truck, according to Zubieta.

Sloppy, 28, lost control of his modified 2000 Ford Ranger while he was driving 45 to 50 miles per hour. He was not arrested, and alcohol was not a factor in the crash, officials said.

The San Bernardino County coroner's office identified seven of the dead: Brian Wolfin, 27, of Escondido, Calif.; Anthony Sanchez, 23, of Escondido, Calif.; Aaron Farkas, 25, of Escondido, Calif.; Andrew Therrin, 22, of Riverside, Calif.; Zachary Freeman, 24, of Fillmore, Calif.; Dustin C. Malson, 24, of Ventura, Calif.; and Danica Frantzich, 20, of Las Vegas.

The 200-mile race, held on desolate Soggy Dry Lake on federal desert land just east of the San Bernardino Mountains, was sanctioned by Mojave Desert Racing and was part of a seven-race circuit. Off-roaders race around the 50-mile loop four times, reaching speeds upward of 60 mph.

Witnesses to the crash described a chaotic scene.

"There was dust everywhere, people screaming, people running," a photographer, David Conklin, told the Associated Press. "When I got up to the vehicle, I could tell that several people were trapped. There were just bodies everywhere. One woman with a major head wound [was] lying in a pool of blood. Someone else was crushed beneath the car."

Jeff Musgrave, an off-roader from Orange County, Calif., who was watching the race, called it gruesome but defended the driver.

"All I saw was the dust, and then I saw about 30 people on the ground. It was just brutal," Musgrave, 43, told the Los Angeles Times. "The problem is the crowd was just too close. I don't think the [racer] did anything stupid. He just hit it way too hard."

Sloppy had to be escorted from the area after the crowd "started to get rowdy," Zubieta said. "People were upset."

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