Posted on 07/17/2009 4:38:46 AM PDT by restornu
Bridge demolition begins; freeway shut indefinitely
Smoke still billowed from the twisted wreckage beneath the collapsed Nine Mile Road bridge on Thursday as police investigated the spectacular, fiery crash that has closed I-75 indefinitely.
The driver of the gas tanker that exploded has been identified as Michael St. John, 44, of Armada. The driver of the car believed to have caused the accident may face charges and his insurance company could be asked to foot road repair bills, officials said.
On the service drive Thursday, demolition crews set out Dumpsters to haul away metal,
concrete and the charred remains of a tanker truck, produce sem-truck and passenger car that crashed about 8:10 p.m. Wednesday.
State police reported the explosive accident happened after the driver of a car on northbound I-75 lost control of his vehicle, drifted across two lanes of traffic and struck the tanker.
The driver of the car, Saied Haidarian-Shahri, 27, of Clawson, may face charges when state police submit their investigation for review to Oakland County prosecutors next week, said Michigan State Police Lt. Shannon Sims.
"He is the one who lost control of his vehicle and caused the accident," Sims said of the car's driver.
State police said the cab of the fuel tanker separated from the fuel tank after it was struck and jackknifed.
"The cab detached and hit the center median and the fuel tanker hit the roadway and exploded," Sims said.
Police said the driver of a Meijer semi-truck on northbound I-75 saw the accident and came to a complete stop beneath the Nine Mile Road bridge and abandoned his vehicle.
The drivers of the tanker and Meijer truck were transported to the hospital with minor injuries and released, Sims said.
The Meijer truck was driven by Jody Cicero, 38, of Monroe.
Hazel Park police said they found Haidarian-Shahri as he was leaving the scene on foot and brought him to their station where he was questioned by state police.
He has had his driver's license for only a couple of months, according to the Michigan Secretary of State's office.
All three drivers were interviewed and their statements will be compared with results of the accident reconstruction. More details about the cause of the fiery crash could be released Monday, Sims said.
Miracle nobody killed
On Thursday morning, the blackened tanker was flipped on its side north of the fallen bridge, which flattened almost all of the Meijer produce truck. A couple feet of the truck was left intact over strewn lettuce and fruit a few yards from the burned passenger car facing toward the southeast.
As he surveyed the damage, Fire Chief Ray DeWalt still couldn't believe no one was seriously hurt when the tanker filled with more than 9,000 gallons of gasoline and 4,000 gallons of diesel fuel rolled over and caught fire.
"It's amazing no one suffered more than minor injuries," DeWalt said. "It may have just been a matter of timing. If this happened three hours earlier during rush hour who knows what would have happened."
Firefighters from Ferndale, Madison Heights and Royal Oak were the first to the scene Wednesday night and doused the blaze with water and foam until about 2:30 a.m. Thursday. Agencies from as far west as Bloomfield delivered five-gallon jugs of foam to keep the suppression effort going.
DeWalt said the mutual aid plan was implemented without a hitch.
"The outcome was as best as I could expect," he said.
Hazel Park City Manager Ed Klobucher credited first responders from Hazel Park and the region for helping with the city's second major incident.
"I'm extremely proud of my city employees," Klobucher said. "We started the day with a house explosion (one person severely burned) and ended it with a catastrophic fire that collapsed a bridge. It was an incredible inferno and I'm thankful we had all hands on deck. It's a miracle there weren't any fatalities."
Flames shot into the air almost as high as the nine-story Days Inn next to the freeway, Klobucher said. The black plume of smoke could be seen for miles.
Gary Reid of Hazel Park got a close look. He was buying a soft drink from the Exxon gas station when he heard what he thought was a crash involving five to 10 vehicles.
"I saw fire shoot up instantly from under the bridge," Reid said. "You could feel the heat."
He ran over and said he saw the tanker rolled sideways.
"The car exploded when I was over there," Reid said. "It was really loud."
He figured the eastern half of the bridge collapsed about an hour later.
"There was a big thump and it felt like a minor earthquake," Reid said.
Hazel Park Fire Lt. Bill Anderson said the hours long fire from the tanker explosion was the biggest he has seen in his 25 years as a firefighter.
"The bridge was still up when I got there," he said. "And then it just went down, boom, from all that heat."
He estimated the massive fire burned at temperatures of up to 2,400 degrees Fahrenheit, twice the temperature at which steel fails and twists.
The 13,000 gallons of fuel feeding the fire sent black oily smoke 200 feet into the air, where it blew with a northeast wind, Anderson said.
"In a way it was spectacular looking," he said.
Bridge may be rebuilt by Thanksgiving
Just a year after the Nine Mile Road overpass connecting east and west Hazel Park was rebuilt, a crane and other equipment returned Thursday to demolish it.
Although half of the five-lane bridge still stood over the southbound lanes, the entire structure is being razed as part of an $84,000 bid awarded Thursday morning to Posen Construction Co., according to Rob Morosi, spokesman for the Michigan Department of Transportation.
"The heat from the fire compromised the strength of the steel beams," Morosi said of the decision to tear down the remaining part of the bridge.
The overpass will be rebuilt for $1-2 million, possibly by Thanksgiving, he said.
Klobucher said residents waited at least seven years for the deteriorating bridge to be renovated in 2008. They kept up a steady stream of complaints to the state about being able to look down holes to the freeway below.
"It was the poster child for bad bridges," Klobucher said. "We fought to have it fixed and now it's in the middle of I-75."
If a driver is determined to be the cause of the bridge's collapse, the state can seek reimbursement from the insurer.
"When we obtain the police report we'll turn it over to the attorney general and they will represent the department to recoup the financial loss," Morosi said.
Machines that break concrete were being used at the accident scene Thursday afternoon. By the end of the weekend, debris should be removed and the road should be cleaned up, Morosi said.
"Then we can determine the fix on the pavement," he said. "It's too early to say when we can reopen the freeway, but we are working diligently on that for the public."
About 160,000 motorists a day used that stretch of I-75. They are being detoured around closures at Eight Mile Road and I-696 indefinitely.
"The X factor will be the condition of the pavement," said Morosi, adding the aftermath of the crash could be worse. "We can replace an overpass and a road, but not a life. When there aren't any fatalities, it's a very fortunate accident."
Sudden Jihad Syndrome?
That is what I was wondering too.
****
On the news it says he is non compliant and wont apologized because he felt he did not make a mistake so all is this does not look good!
Crawling with muslims, indeed, but very few Iranians. The bulk of metro Detroit’s muslims are of Iraqi or Lebanese descent. And, like I stated, the timing is off for this have been a planned event. I’m going to be keeping a close eye on this story, however. Maybe it ends with a traffic ticket and a very p!ssed off insurance company, maybe we learn something else.
You forgot Palestinians and Syrians along with the Iraqis and Lebanese. There’s quite a few Christian Arabs in the area along with the religion of peace. I’ve met quite a few Iranians in the Detroit area. I was good friends with one in high school.
The driver could face reckless driving charges. He acted with a “willful and wanton” disregard for the safety of other drivers.
Hazel Park police said they found Haidarian-Shahri as he was leaving the scene on foot and brought him to their station where he was questioned by state police. He has had his driver's license for only a couple of months, according to the Michigan Secretary of State's office.
Didn’t see any updates on FR so posting this for posterity. I can’t believe this isn’t newsworthy. I think he is a suicide terrorist who survived for another day yet he is out free.
WXYZ) - The driver being blamed for causing the wreck on I-75 at 9 Mile in Hazel Park isn’t talking.
WATCH TEAM 7 COVERAGE IN THE VIDEO PLAYER ON THE RIGHT WHICH INCLUDES ALTERNATE ROUTES
Action News caught up with 27-year-old driver Saied Haidarian-Shahri of Clawson as he was leaving his home, but he refused to give any explanation or even discuss what happened.
Haidarian-Shahri is believed to have started the crash that led to a tanker explosion and the collapse of the 9 Mile overpass.
Meantime, Michigan Department of Transportation crews are working feverishly to complete the demolition phase.
thank you for the update
“In Michigan, you must show proof of insurance to obtain plates for your car.”
Just to clarify-
Before a MI license plate can be issued, something that PASSES for proof of insurance must be shown. That’s reality. Not all “proof” of insurance used to obtain MI license plates is legitimate.
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