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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Pileup involves 100 vehicles


A tow truck lifts a  semi-truck from the top of a crushed car Saturday  on Highway 99  in Fresno, Calif. Associated Press
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Garance Burke Associated Press

FRESNO, Calif. – More than 100 cars and trucks crashed on a fog-shrouded freeway Saturday, killing at least two people and injuring dozens more, the California Highway Patrol said.

Eighteen big rigs were involved in the massive pileup on Highway 99 just south of Fresno as patches of dense fog obscured visibility on the heavily traveled roadway, CHP officials said.

“It looked like something out of a movie, walking up and seeing all the cars mangled and crushed,” CHP Officer Paul Solorzano Jr. said.

A 5-year-old boy and a 26-year-old man traveling in separate vehicles were killed in the chain-reaction collisions around 7:45 a.m., he said.

Morris Taylor, 61, of San Antonio, was arrested on a misdemeanor drunken driving charge, said CHP Officer Kirk Arnold.

“He has not been said to have been the cause of (the crash), he is just a person who was involved in the collision who was taken in for DUI,” Arnold said.

Mike Bowman, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, said, “It looked like chaos. Cars were backed up on top of each other.”

Rescuers had to extract several people from the wreckage, and paramedics took more than three dozen patients to the hospital, Fresno Fire Department spokesman Ken Shockley said.

“Everybody was trying to miss everybody, but it was impossible not to get hit,” said Cindy Ramirez, 21, of Selma, whose pickup was rear-ended. “I’m fine physically, but I keep thinking about all of the things that could have happened.”

Hours after the accident, the freeway was littered with smashed vehicles, broken glass, auto parts and blood. A big rig carrying stacked crates of live turkeys was stranded on the normally busy highway.

Two of the big rigs leaked 90 gallons of diesel fuel onto the freeway when their fuel tanks ruptured, but the diesel was contained. No hazardous materials were spilled, CHP officials said.

The freeway’s northbound lanes were shut down indefinitely as investigators worked to determine the cause of the crash. Traffic backed up for miles south of the wreckage. Southbound lanes remained opened.

Thick seasonal fog known as “tule fog” typically occurs in Central California in the late fall and winter. Two people died along a nearby stretch of fog-blanketed Highway 99 in an 87-vehicle pileup in 2002, and a section several miles south was the scene of a 74-vehicle crash that left two dead nearly a decade ago.