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Flames engulf vehicles after a crash along Interstate 75. Photo: WGFL-Gainesville via AP

Five children in church van going to Disney World and two truck drivers die in fiery crash and explosion on Florida highway

  • Diesel fuel spilled onto road, feeding flames on Interstate 75
  • The church van was caught in the smash involving two big trucks, before another vehicle ploughed though the victims and wreckage

Five children heading to Disney World in a church van from Louisiana died along with two truck drivers in a fiery crash on Interstate 75 in north Florida, the Florida Highway Patrol said Friday.

The children were travelling in a large passenger van from Avoyelles Parish, Lieutenant Patrick Riordan said during a news conference on Friday morning in Alachua, which is south of Gainesville.

This image taken from a Florida 511 traffic camera and provided by the Alachua County Fire Rescue, shows a fiery crash along Interstate 75. Photo: Alachua County Fire Rescue/Florida 511 via AP

On Thursday, a big rig and a passenger vehicle collided in the northbound lanes of the highway and continued across the crash barrier and into the path of another big truck and the church van, investigators said.

“Once those semis struck, they both caught fire,” Riordan said. He said a fifth vehicle came through and either struck people who had been ejected from the vehicle or debris. Hundreds of litres of diesel fuel spilled, fuelling the fire that also damaged the road in some spots.

At least eight people were sent to the hospital with injuries.

Vinnie DeVita said he was driving south at the time and narrowly escaped the crash – he said it saw it happen in the rear-view mirror, immediately behind him, according to a report by WKMG.

The sun sets over burned semi-trucks and vehicle debris after a wreck with multiple fatalities on Interstate 75, south of Alachua. Photo: Lauren Bacho/The Gainesville Sun via AP

“If I had stepped on the brake when I heard the noise, undoubtedly, I would have been in that accident,” DeVita said. “And then within probably 15 to 20 seconds of it all, it exploded. I mean, just a ball of flames.”

The aftermath closed part of the highway in both directions, causing massive delays along the busy north-south corridor. Authorities opened the northbound lanes around 8pm but all but one southbound lane remained closed Friday morning. Debris, including personal property and vehicle parts, was scattered across the road, the Florida Highway Patrol said. A helicopter helped search for any victims who may have been in nearby woods.

Nicole Towarek was travelling northbound with her family when they came across the scene. She told the Gainesville Sun that black smoke billowed, people were laid out near vehicles, there were long skid marks across the roadway and emergency workers were converging on the area.

“We kept seeing these little explosions and fire,” she said. “The heat, it was insane.”

It was the worst accident on I-75 in Alachua County since January 2012, when 11 people died in a chain-reaction crash attributed to heavy fog and smoke on the roadway, which crosses Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park. Officials were criticised then for not closing the road due to worsening conditions, and later installed cameras, sensors and large electronic signs to help prevent similar crashes.

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