21 people injured, all transported to hospitals, after a car, driven by a young woman, crashes into the Second Haitian Baptist Church in Fort Myers, just before an Easter concert.

Modified Date: 
Wed, 09/24/2014 - 11:31am
Accident Date: 
Saturday, April 19, 2014

Car hits packed Florida church, injuring 21.

A car slammed into a packed Florida church just as its annual Easter concert was about to begin, injuring 21 people as it barreled through the brick outer wall and several rows of pews, Fort Myers police said.

A car slammed into a packed Florida church just as its annual Easter concert was about to begin, injuring 21 people as it barreled through the brick outer wall and several rows of pews, Fort Myers police said.

The Lexus sedan struck the Second Haitian Baptist Church at around 8 p.m. Sunday, when there were about 200 people inside, Lt. Victor Medico said.

When officers arrived at the scene, church members used car jacks to lift the vehicle off of people who were trapped underneath.

Investigators were looking into the crash even though they believe it was "an unfortunate traffic accident."

"Everybody was sitting and the service started and then 'BING' the car came in," said Jean Corjeles, who was in the church when the crash happened.

"So many people are injured," he said.

Medico said the driver, a young woman, told investigators she was looking for a parking spot when the car malfunctioned and it drove "straight into the building," adding that she said the car's brakes malfunctioned.

Even though the car drove through an exterior wall and into the building, the structure isn't in danger of collapsing, said both Medico and Benjamin Abes, Lee County's EMS operations chief.

Lee Memorial health System spokeswoman Mary Biggs said 18 people were taken to Lee County hospitals and one was discharged late Sunday. She said none required surgery.

Type: Car Accident
People Involved: 
Roadway: 
Broadway Avenue

Comments

This probably resulted from a defect in the electronic throttle control, and it's important to realize that just because an electronically induced unintended acceleration event can't be diagnosed, that doesn't mean it didn't happen. Dr. Antony Anderson's recent study - accepted for publication by IEEE Access - addresses this situation. My 4/8/2014 blog post includes a discussion of Dr. Anderson's work and a link to his study. And embedded systems expert Michael Barr has found defects galore in Toyota's electronic throttle control. Search "Beware of Toyota. Their next victm may be YOU..."

Add new comment

To prevent automated s-p-a-m submissions leave this field empty.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
2 + 13 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.