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At least 9 dead in California bus crash

April 11, 2014 11:58 am | Updated May 21, 2016 10:31 am IST - ORLAND, California

A FedEx tractor-trailer crossed a grassy freeway median and slammed into a bus carrying high school students on a visit to a college. At least nine were killed in the fiery crash, authorities said.

Massive flames could be seen devouring both vehicles just after the crash, and clouds of smoke billowed into the sky until firefighters had quenched the fire, leaving behind scorched black hulks of metal. Bodies were draped in yellow plastic inside the burned-out bus.

California Highway Patrol (CHP) dispatchers said the drivers of the tractor-trailer and bus were among the dead, along with seven other people who were riding on the bus.

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The crash happened a little after 5.30 pm (local time) on Interstate 5 near Orland, a small city about 160 kilometres north of Sacramento.

The bus was one of two that the admissions office at Humboldt State University had chartered to bring prospective students from California to tour the Arcata campus, Humboldt’s vice-president of administrative affairs Joyce Lopes said.

University police were trying to determine, which school districts the students were from and fielding telephone calls from anxious parents, Ms. Lopes said.

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“Our hearts go out to those who have been affected, and we are here to support them, and their families, in any way possible,” Humboldt State’s President Rollin Richmond said in a statement on the school’s website.

A CHP dispatcher said the bus and truck were on opposite sides of the freeway when the truck crossed the median and slammed into the bus, causing an explosion and fire.

Investigators said the truck driver might have been trying to avoid a passenger car that was also involved in the crash.

A first responder who helped set up a triage at the scene said 36 or 37 people received injuries ranging from severe to minor burns, broken legs and noses and head lacerations.

“The victims were teenage kids. A lot of them were freaked out. They were shocked. They still couldn’t grasp what happened,” Jason Wyman with the Orland Volunteer Fire Department said.

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