Dan Robinson
EF5
This 2017 incident in Wisconsin, while not involving chasers, has similarities to the two fatal accidents caused by storm chasers running stop signs. A semi driver collided with a van with 7 occupants, one of which did not survive. The driver was charged with vehicular homicide and pleaded no contest to the charges in October.
Articles:
https://www.wiscnews.com/portagedai...cle_fd91d4ff-dc42-570c-a1de-1be8cf1049f2.html
https://www.wiscnews.com/portagedai...cle_cfc367f7-9265-5419-9784-0cccf290db2d.html
Dashcam video from the semi:
This intersection has a similar configuration as the Texas and Minnesota fatal crash sites each in which a chaser ran a stop sign: flat terrain, straight roads, two intersecting rural two-lane highways with 55mph+ speed limits, blocked visibility of oncoming traffic by trees or corn fields and the lack of rumble strips as an additional alerter to vehicles of the stop sign ahead. As with the other two sites involving chasers, the Wisconsin intersection has also been a site of previous accidents of the same type. Officials have installed rumble strips at the Wisconsin intersection as a result of the accident.
A couple of things to note about these cases. This type of intersection (two-way stops at intersecting 2-lane highways) has long been recognized for high accident rates. In at least the MN and WI cases, the state has started evaluating many other similar intersections and initiatives are being undertaken to increase their safety - including rumble strips, larger stop signs and flashing lights. So, a case can be made that someone isn't 100% at fault in that there are inherent risks in having small signs on monotonous, straight roads as the only warning to a driver of an approaching hazard.
But ultimately, the driver is responsible. The at-fault parties are still on the hook for civil and criminal penalties. In the MN criminal case involving a chaser, the court imposed a 90-day suspended sentence. The civil suit was settled with the chaser agreeing to pay $100k to the victims' family. The (non-chaser) WI case is also proceeding with the driver being sentenced later this year. No question that similar charges would have resulted in the Texas chaser case if the driver survived.
Jail sentences, sometimes significant, are commonly imposed on these type of accidents:
10 days:
http://www.startribune.com/10-day-j...ed-other-motorist-near-twin-cities/487270641/
11.5 years:
https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/...for-Va-Crash-That-Killed-Woman-488017221.html
100 days:
http://www.cnn.com/2004/LAW/01/22/janklow.sentencing/
3 years:
https://www.13abc.com/content/news/...n-stop-sign-fatally-struck-boy-400115961.html
45 days house arrest:
https://www.daytondailynews.com/new...-that-killed-year-old/1N15PD9LgafvnCQ28ZgNUI/
1 year:
https://www.whio.com/news/local/pre...ole-deadly-2017-crash/Z4AvsCO8w0r6kuV9flJqmJ/
5 years:
https://www.nbc26.com/news/brown-county-teen-sentenced-in-car-deaths-of-two-people
In my estimation, running a stop sign may be the biggest single risk in storm chasing. There have been two fatal accidents of this type involving chasers, and probably many more nonfatals that we don't know about. A fatal crash will destroy the lives of everyone involved.
Edit: thread moved and re-titled.
Articles:
https://www.wiscnews.com/portagedai...cle_fd91d4ff-dc42-570c-a1de-1be8cf1049f2.html
https://www.wiscnews.com/portagedai...cle_cfc367f7-9265-5419-9784-0cccf290db2d.html
Dashcam video from the semi:
This intersection has a similar configuration as the Texas and Minnesota fatal crash sites each in which a chaser ran a stop sign: flat terrain, straight roads, two intersecting rural two-lane highways with 55mph+ speed limits, blocked visibility of oncoming traffic by trees or corn fields and the lack of rumble strips as an additional alerter to vehicles of the stop sign ahead. As with the other two sites involving chasers, the Wisconsin intersection has also been a site of previous accidents of the same type. Officials have installed rumble strips at the Wisconsin intersection as a result of the accident.
A couple of things to note about these cases. This type of intersection (two-way stops at intersecting 2-lane highways) has long been recognized for high accident rates. In at least the MN and WI cases, the state has started evaluating many other similar intersections and initiatives are being undertaken to increase their safety - including rumble strips, larger stop signs and flashing lights. So, a case can be made that someone isn't 100% at fault in that there are inherent risks in having small signs on monotonous, straight roads as the only warning to a driver of an approaching hazard.
But ultimately, the driver is responsible. The at-fault parties are still on the hook for civil and criminal penalties. In the MN criminal case involving a chaser, the court imposed a 90-day suspended sentence. The civil suit was settled with the chaser agreeing to pay $100k to the victims' family. The (non-chaser) WI case is also proceeding with the driver being sentenced later this year. No question that similar charges would have resulted in the Texas chaser case if the driver survived.
Jail sentences, sometimes significant, are commonly imposed on these type of accidents:
10 days:
http://www.startribune.com/10-day-j...ed-other-motorist-near-twin-cities/487270641/
11.5 years:
https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/...for-Va-Crash-That-Killed-Woman-488017221.html
100 days:
http://www.cnn.com/2004/LAW/01/22/janklow.sentencing/
3 years:
https://www.13abc.com/content/news/...n-stop-sign-fatally-struck-boy-400115961.html
45 days house arrest:
https://www.daytondailynews.com/new...-that-killed-year-old/1N15PD9LgafvnCQ28ZgNUI/
1 year:
https://www.whio.com/news/local/pre...ole-deadly-2017-crash/Z4AvsCO8w0r6kuV9flJqmJ/
5 years:
https://www.nbc26.com/news/brown-county-teen-sentenced-in-car-deaths-of-two-people
In my estimation, running a stop sign may be the biggest single risk in storm chasing. There have been two fatal accidents of this type involving chasers, and probably many more nonfatals that we don't know about. A fatal crash will destroy the lives of everyone involved.
Edit: thread moved and re-titled.
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