Once again, another family has been torn to shreds by the misguided actions of another. This story repeats itself far too often throughout the United States and globe at large. A moment’s worth of poor judgment is all it takes to provoke a lifetime of suffering–and the end of many lives. I’ve been profiling stories of wrong-way crashes for more than five years now. Here is another case where multiple members of a family lose their lives due to the mindlessness of a fellow human being.
What happened to the Moore family?
Jennifer Moore, 46, and her daughter, Jaidyn, 9, as well as the family dog, were killed on May 25, 2019, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, by Samantha Winchester, 23, who also perished in the crash. Per police reports, the crash occurred at approximately 2 AM on Michigan’s Highway 14 in the Superior Township of Washtenaw County. Jennifer was driving eastbound on M-14 along with her husband Howard, 49, the assistant coach of the University of Wisconsin basketball team, their daughter, Jaidyn, and their son, Jerell, 13. Samantha was driving westbound in the eastbound lane and crashed into the Moore family vehicle. A third vehicle was hit in the crash as well and the driver survived with minor injuries.
Police responded to the crash within a few minutes. Jaidyn and Samantha died at the scene while Jennifer was transported to a local hospital and died after removal of life support on Saturday. Howard received third-degree burns while Jerell received minor injuries. Howard was later released from the hospital in early June while his son was released three days after the crash.
How could these deaths have been prevented?
To be as blunt as possible, these deaths could have been prevented if Samantha had driven in the right direction down M-14 that night. Nearly every story from the time of the crash states that toxicology results are “pending,” but no updates on those results were ever made widely available. All signs point to her inebriation, however, as alcohol is almost always the reason behind high speed wrong-way crashes at night. I most recently wrote about such a story here involving Abby Michaels, who killed an entire family by driving drunk the wrong way in Ohio that same month.
We don’t know what compelled Samantha to drive the wrong way that night. We do know that her decision cost her her life, as well as the lives of two people who did not make the decision to drive the wrong way down the highway, as well as the family dog. And the survivors of the crash–a father and son–will now be condemned to live the rest of their lives without two of the people they cherished most in the world. Samantha’s family will assuredly feel the same loss.
It isn’t fair.
Alcohol is a death sentence when paired with an auto
I’ve written about the dangers of alcohol before; this isn’t the first fatal crash I’ve profiled on The Car Crash Detective, and it unfortunately is unlikely to be the last. This story repeats itself thousands of times a year in the United States and millions of times a year around the globe. The research shows that there is no safe amount of alcohol you can consume before you drive. This is why alcohol limits are so much lower in most European countries than they are in the United States; the knowledge is spreading that fatal crashes and impaired driving can and do occur at much lower levels of intoxication than previously thought.
There is no safe limit of alcohol a human being can drink before driving a vehicle. To paraphrase a famous film from decades gone, the only winning move is not to play.
Best practices aren’t a mystery. They save lives. Please learn them and share them. Don’t make Sam’s mistake.
If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases. It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.
After more than five years of constant writing about crashes and the damage they did to families, I took a hiatus to spend more time with mine. But couldn’t stay away. I kept coming across articles involving one senseless death after another. It was time to get back to work. This is one of the tragedies I came across during the time I spent away from The Car Crash Detective. As is too often the case, it involves the loss of an entire family due to the mindlessness of a fellow human being. These are their stories.
What happened to the Thompson family?
Timmy Thomson, 51, his wife Karen, 50, and their daughter, Tessa, 10, died the night of March 17, 2019 in Dayton, Ohio. Karen was a special education teacher at Taft Elementary in the Cincinnati Public School District while Tessa was a student at St. Susanna School. The family was on a return trip from visiting Karen’s family in the northern part of the state. They drove a Toyota Camry.
The family was southbound on I-75 at approximately 8:10 PM when hit head-on in the center lane by Abby Michaels, 21, who was northbound in the southbound lane in a white Kia sedan. She had apparently crossed the median, made a U-turn, and headed the wrong way in the center lane for approximately 10 seconds before hitting the Thomson vehicle. Timmy and his daughter died at the scene while Karen passed away some time later at a local hospital. Abby survived with serious but stable injuries.
What led Abby to drive the wrong way that night?
Per police reports, Abby was returning from a St. Patrick’s Day celebration she’d attended earlier in the day. She was dressed in a St. Patrick’s Day shirt, wore a number of plastic shamrock necklaces, and her cheek was covered in a temporary tattoo of a beer mug. The most significant details, however, included a Fireball whisky cup in her bag and beer flowing from her mouth when first responders attempted to get her to breathe after the crash. Additionally, Abby’s husband from June 2018, Kyle Pastorelle, had apparently filed for divorce from Abby on March 15, 2019, two days before the crash.
How could these deaths have been prevented?
None of these deaths had to occur that night. They were completely preventable. Had Abby handed over the keys to a friend, called a cab, or spent $20 for a car hire via Uber, Lyft, or a similar service, an entire family would not have perished that night. Beyond that, free cab rides were available that night provided by Dayton and Montgomery County to encourage people to make safe driving decisions on a day known for alcoholic consumption. None of this was necessary.
Is it possible her recent divorce proceedings may have affected her mental and emotional state? Absolutely. Her drinking was not the problem; we celebrate and grieve in different ways. The problem was her decision to drive despite having drunk. This split second decision cost three people their lives–three people who had no connection to her besides the misfortune of being in her path that night.
Alcohol is a death sentence when paired with an auto
I’ve written about the dangers of alcohol before; this isn’t the first fatal crash I’ve profiled on The Car Crash Detective, and it unfortunately is unlikely to be the last. This story repeats itself thousands of times a year in the United States and millions of times a year around the globe. The research shows that there is no safe amount of alcohol you can consume before you drive. This is why alcohol limits are so much lower in most European countries than they are in the United States; the knowledge is spreading that fatal crashes and impaired driving can and do occur at much lower levels of intoxication than previously thought.
A later report stated Abby was legally intoxicated with a BAC post crash of .099, slightly higher than the Ohio legal limit of .08. However, .08 was already far too much alcohol to consume before driving a multi-ton vehicle. Half of that would have been too much. There is no safe limit above zero.
Best practices aren’t a mystery. They save lives. Please learn them and share them. Don’t make Abby’s mistake.
If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases. It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.
I’ve spent the better part of a decade advocating for changes in our driving culture, but I still don’t like writing about car crashes or the pain they being families. With few exceptions, I know none of these people personally, but there are many who do. Each casualty is an entire world lost to someone. I hope to keep writing until our roads are so safe I have no more deaths to profile. Each story is a tragedy, and if we learn anything from it to reduce the likelihood of a future needless death, then something good will have come from each passing.
What happened to the Machado family?
Today’s tragedy involves the Machado family. The crash occurred on April 20, 2019. The family headed south on US 41 in North Fort Meyers, Florida in a 2000Jeep Wrangler driven by Jesus, 36. For whatever reason, he hit the median curb, triggering a rollover. The Jeep rolled several times before coming to a rest. Jesus was immediately thrown from the vehicle and died at the scene. Keli suffered severe injuries and died in the hospital six days after the crash. Their five year old daughter, Khaleesi, was hospitalized in critical condition while their two sons, Anthony, 11, and Vincent, 8, survived with minor injuries.
How could these casualties have been prevented?
While it’s impossible to know the full truth of what happened that night, there are a number of inferences we can draw to help us understand why two members of the family passed away, why one was severely injured, and why two survived with minor injuries.
While relatives have speculated that Jesus drove into the median because the Jeep was hit by another vehicle that fled the scene, no witnesses or evidence have corroborated this idea. Statistically speaking, given the fact that half of all vehicular fatalities are single vehicle crashes and there is no proof of intervention by another vehicle, the most likely cause of the crash is driver error. He might have been talking to his wife, checking his phone, or simply falling asleep, given the time of the crash. Whatever the reason, he hit the curb and the vehicle either rolled as a result of the impact our due to his attempts to correct its trajectory. Once the rollover began, the fate of each occupant depended wholly on decisions made hours, months, or even years ago.
The Jeep Wrangler is one of the least safe vehicles you can have the misfortune of occupying during a rollover as it does not have a roof designed to support its weight. The Wrangler has a cloth top, which is why it doesn’t have a roof score by the IIHS (a “good” score means the roof is capable of supporting four times the weight of the vehicle). The fact that it doesn’t have *any* score means it doesn’t even have to abide by the NHTSA’s regulations for passenger vehicles (those weighing under roughly 6,500 lbs) stipulating an ability to support at least 1.5 times the weight of the vehicle. To put it simply, the Wrangler is treated as a convertible when it comes to rollover safety, and when you’re in a convertible, you’re as good as dead in a rollover. Keep this in mind the next time you think of riding in, driving, or buying a Jeep Wrangler.
An unbuckled occupant is a death sentence in a crash
Jesus was ejected from the vehicle. He was the only occupant who left the vehicle during the rollover. We know from reports that he was unbuckled, which is a death sentence in any crash above school zone speeds and in a rollover at nearly any speed. It’s very, very difficult to be ejected from a vehicle in a crash if you’re a buckled occupant, especially if the adjacent door does not open before the vehicle comes to rest.
Keli’s severe injuries likely occurred from one of three factors: the possibility that she was unbuckled, her husband, or the vehicle in which she was an occupant. The first scenario is the most likely: if her husband’s death was assured by being unbuckled, hers would have been as well. The second scenario is the most morbid; it’s highly possible her husband, who would have been the equivalent of a 250 lb projectile launched at her at 50 mph, could have mortally injured her by hitting her in one of a thousand different ways while he was propelled around the front part of the vehicle due to his unbuckled status. This alone would easily have been enough to kill her. Finally, it’s possible that the roof on the Jeep (which, as you remember from above, was not designed to support the weight of the vehicle at rest, never mind from a drop or during a high speed rollover), caved in toward the front of the vehicle if he initial impacts during the rollover occurred there, reducing her survival space and causing significant head trauma.
We don’t know what happened to her. But the odds were against her due to her proximity to her unbuckled husband. We also don’t know if she was buckled. If she was not, that was its own death sentence, regardless of her husband’s presence. However, given the fact that “it was unknown” if she were buckled while it was clearly known that her husband was not and that her boys were, it is highly likely she was unbuckled.
Khaleesi’s injuries could have occurred due to compromization of survival space due to a roof cave in, but I suspect they are most likely to have occurred due to improper restraint. Specifically, she most likely was not wearing a seat belt.This is particularly likely to be the case when you consider the fact that there are only four seats in a 2-door Jeep Cherokee, and two of them in the back were occupied by her brothers, who were buckled.
That said, let’s take a look at best practices for children her age. The safest position for a 5-year old child (e.g., a kindergartner) is a rear-facing harnessed seat. Indeed, this is the safest position for adults and children of all ages. However, virtually no 5-year-olds rear-face in the United States (you’d have to go to Sweden to see this in appreciable numbers). The second best position is either forward-facing and harnessed or in a high-back booster if the child is mature enough to sit properly all the time. However, the stats show that most parents aren’t doing any of the above; most parents of 5-year old children are using seat belts. And a child placed in a seat belt before ages 10-12 is at a significantly greater risk of injury than the same child in a booster, regardless of how mature s/he is. Yes, middle schoolers often need booster seats. Pre-teens too.
If the Machados were like most parents, they strapped Khaleesi in, but at that age, a seat belt isn’t enough. And if she’d been boostered but wasn’t sitting properly, the booster was useless. News reports have not indicated whether or not she was restrained. However, again, given that a news report identified the husband as unbuckled, the boys as buckled, and the condition of mother and daughter as unknown, the most likely explanation is that she was unbuckled.
The boys may have escaped with minimal injury simply because they were larger and more capable of sustaining the crash forces while seat belted than Khaleesi. As larger children, they’d have had stronger bones and muscles and would have been more likely to fit their seat belts and not submarine out of them the way a younger child would. However, let’s be blunt:
The boys survived with minimal injuries because they appear to have been the only occupants in the vehicle who were wearing seat belts.
We know they were restrained from reports. We know their sister was unrestrained because there literally were not enough seats for her in the vehicle, never mind enough seat belts. We know their father was unrestrained and we are almost certain that their mother was unrestrained as well.
Seat belts made the lion’s share of the difference in their survival.
The statistics of car crashes don’t paint a portrait of survival
This is speculation. But statistically speaking, these were the most likely configurations of each individual, and combined with the knowledge of the vehicle in which they were traveling and what crash forces do to individuals in such a crash environment, these are the most likely results. Thirty-five thousand people aren’t dying a year in the United States because they’re bad people or because they deserved death. They die because of a lack of knowledge and usage of best practices, whether at the individual or societal level. You need to be restrained safely. You need to drive safely. You need reasonably safe vehicles. And most of all, you need safe infrastructure, which includes a culture of fear and respect toward the fact that our bodies are no match for the equivalent of being pushed out of 5-story buildings with the expectation of survival. These are the forces you’re dealing with in a 50 mph crash. Statistically speaking, you’re not going to make it, and if you do, at least one of your loved ones won’t.
If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases. It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety is one of my favorite resources for crash testing data on vehicle sold in the United States. Frankly, it’s the only real option out there aside from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, and it’s helpful to have both present, since their tests, while simlar, aren’t exactly the same, and they complement each other wonderfully. However, the IIHS has unfortunately become a lot less useful with the latest redesign to their website, as they chose to quietly remove the technical details from their crash tests. I could not find any mention of the change on the IIHS website, and there does not appear to be any other way of accessing the information aside from by receiving it on a case-by-case basis from the IIHS.
When the IIHS removes specifications from crash tests, we all lose
This is unfortunate. What is left is the report-card system of “Good, Acceptable, Marginable, Poor” that offers little more than a top level summary of crash test performance. However, the depth of information formerly present that allowed us to draw comparisons between levels of protection is gone. Previous articles on the Car Crash Detective comparing, for example, the levels of side impact intrusion resistance across SUVs can no longer be written using IIHS data, as they’ve hidden the very data that lets you know which vehicles were best able to keep 3,400 lbs of steel and plastic from crushing you when ramming into your driver’s side door.
Are there any other resources to find technical crash test details?
Yes indeed; the NHTSA, which is government funded and not a private institution like the IIHS, continues to freely distribute full crash test reports (which the IIHS never has) including all available statistical details on how vehicles faired in crash tests. The problem is that the NHTSA data is more difficult to pull as it requires combing through each report (after downloading them one by one) to find the relevant information. And as noted earlier, the IIHS and NHTSA don’t run exactly the same crash tests, which means you’d only be able to compare NHTSA data to NHTSA data and not to IIHS data, and vice-versa.
Privatization of public safety information is detrimental to us all
This is one of the many downsides of privatization. The information the IIHS collects is useful to the public, but because it’s in the hands of a private company, they are free to hide it as they wish, regardless of the benefits it offers to public safety.
If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases. It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.
Unfortunately, as summer rolls around again in the United States, so do the endless stories of children left in hot vehicles. This isn’t the first of the year, but as with every tragedy, it is worth mentioning and remembering.
Per news reports, a five-month-old girl was found by her own mother in a van outside the Ewing’s Love & Hope Preschool and Academy in Jacksonville, Florida. Mom called the school for an update on her daughter and staff told her that they had not seen her. The mother herself went to the center, found her daughter in the van, was told by staff that they had no idea how long she’d been left in the vehicle…it’s too much to imagine. She was rushed to a nearby hospital but was pronounced dead that afternoon. Per reports, she had been in the van for at least five hours, from 8 in the morning to 1 in the afternoon when discovered.
How can daycare vehicular heat deaths be prevented?
Almost all of these kinds of deaths are preventable. In this case, it wasn’t the standard situation of a parent forgetting her child in a vehicle; here the hired, professional, surrogate parents (because that’s what you are when you’re a teacher; you’re a professional, surrogate parent) did. There is literally nothing the child’s parents could have done to prevent this short of not trusting the school with their children that day, which defeats the purpose of school itself. The school could have prevented or at least significantly reduced the odds of such a death occurring through a number of methods, including a checklist system in which each student checked onto the bus needed to be checked off the bus before the bus driver could lock the vehicle, or through a walk-through system in which the bus driver would walk from the front to the back of the bus before locking it upon his or her return to the front of the vehicle. There are many ways to reduce the likelihoods of these tragedies; unfortunately, they arrived too late for this family.
If you find my information on best practices in car and car seat safety helpful, you can buy my books here or do your shopping through this Amazon link. Canadians can shop here for Canadian purchases. It costs nothing extra to do so, but when you shop through my links, a small portion of your purchase, regardless of what you buy, will go toward the maintenance of The Car Crash Detective.
35,000 Americans will die this year on the road. You don't have to be one of them. A car seat and car safety blog to promote best practices for families.