Five car pileup injures three on highway
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Andrew Edwards
Drivers and a bicyclist escaped without major injuries after a pileup
that stopped traffic in South Laguna on Monday.
All four of the fire department’s engines were sent to the
accident, which occurred near the intersection of South Coast Highway
and 10th Avenue. The crash was reported at about 4:23 p.m.
Emergency workers took a bicyclist, Jeff Gray of Andover, Maryland
and Laguna Beach resident William Nunn to Mission Hospital. A third
patient, Oceanside resident Ryan Howe was taken by a private
ambulance to Saddleback Memorial Medical Center.
“There’s no severe injuries,” traffic Sgt. Jason Kravetz said.
Both Gray and Nunn have been released from the hospital,
spokeswoman Karen Prestia said.
The collision involved five vehicles in addition to the bicycle. A
Lexus was driven by Nunn and a Ford Expedition was driven by Howe, a
Chevy Trailblazer, driven by Las Vegas resident Anthony Lane, a dump
truck driven by San Juan Capistrano resident Dale Kosinski, and a
Ford F150 pickup truck.
Kravetz described the driver of the pickup truck, 38-year-old
Laguna Beach resident Ignacio Salgado, as “the guy that caused it.”
Salgado was cited for failing to yield to oncoming traffic.
An eyewitness described the accident as a series of two crashes.
In the first impact, the driver of the pickup truck pulled out onto
the highway from Point Place, and collided with the Ford as it was
traveling south on the highway, Richard Brown said.
“He got hit in the back and he careened into the oncoming cars,”
he said.
Brown said he did not see the subsequent crash, which involved the
bicyclist and the other vehicles, because his view was blocked by a
dump truck on the side of South Coast Highway.
Before emergency crews arrived, Brown said other witnesses aided
the injured bicyclist.
“He was hurt, some pedestrians came out and laid him down on the
ground,” Brown said.
One of the people who assisted the bicyclist was contractor Mike
Tompkins. Tompkins said he was working in the neighborhood uphill
from the crash when he heard the sound of the vehicles slamming into
each other.
There was an “enormous impact sound. Loud. Frightening,” he said.
After running down to the highway, Tompkins helped to take off
Gray’s backpack, got him on the ground and checked to see if he was
bleeding.
“Everything was in place and he wasn’t leaking any blood,”
Tompkins said.
Judging from the reactions of emergency personnel, Tompkins said
he got the impression the Andover man was the most seriously injured
person in the accident.
Firefighters used the jaws of life to rescue two people stuck in
the truck.
“Both the occupants in there were trapped, but they weren’t hurt,”
Battalion Chief Mark Baker said.
Emergency crews took about 20 minutes to rescue Nunn, Brown said.
When he saw Nunn out of his Lexus, he was being carried on a
stretcher with an oxygen mask on.
Laguna crews were assisted by the Orange County Fire Authority.
Orange County and Newport Beach covered Laguna fire stations while
city crews worked at the crash, Baker said.
South Coast Highway was shut down in both directions after the
accident, and was gradually opened one lane at a time, he said.
The investigation on the accident is not yet finalized.
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