Three-vehicle crash sends 2 women to hospital

PARIS — Two people were injured late Friday morning when a car delivering mail was struck from behind by an 18-wheel tractor-trailer on a rainy, windswept stretch of Route 26 near the West Paris town line.

Chuck Blacquiere photo

The back of a Buick sedan was crushed under the front of an 18-wheel fuel tanker truck on Route 26 in Paris on Friday. Katie Brett had stopped her car to turn left into a store parking lot when it was struck by the truck driven by William LeTarte of Dummer, N.H., police Lt. Michael Dailey said.

Chuck Blacquiere photo

Rescuers remove Katie Brett of Paris from her Buick sedan after it was struck from behind by an 18-wheel fuel tanker on Route 26 in Paris on Friday. Brett was treated at a Norway hospital and released, police Lt. Michael Dailey said, while truck driver William LeTarte of Dummer, N.H., escaped injury.

Chuck Blacquiere photo

A pickup truck driven by Gloria Hadley of West Paris lies at the edge of Route 26 in Paris after colliding with an 18-wheel fuel tanker truck Friday morning. Paris police Lt. Michael Dailey said the tanker truck plowed into the back of a Buick sedan driven by Katie Brett of Paris and pushed it across the highway.

Leslie H. Dixon/Sun Journal

Maine State Police covered a wrecked sedan with a tarp while investigating how the car, a pickup truck and an 18-wheel fuel tanker collided on Route 26 in Paris on Friday.

Chuck Blacquiere photo

An 18-wheel fuel tanker truck plowed into the back of a Buick sedan, right, as both were headed south on Route 26 in Paris on Friday, police Lt. Michael Dailey said. The pickup truck collided with the tanker truck as it pushed the car into the northbound lane. Two of the three drivers, Katie Brett of Paris and Gloria Hadley of West Paris, were hurt.

Leslie H. Dixon/Sun Journal

Paris firefighter Allen Larson, right foreground, and Norway fire Chief Dennis Yates, left foreground, and other firefighters placed booms to contain fuel that leaked from a tanker truck involved in a crash on Route 26 in Paris on Friday. In the background is a truck driven by Gloria Hadley of West Paris that was involved in the crash.

Leslie H. Dixon/Sun Journal

A Buick sedan, an 18-wheel fuel tanker truck and a pickup truck lie along Route 26 in Paris after a collision Friday morning. Drivers Katie Brett of Paris and Gloria Hadley of West Paris were injured; truck driver William LeTarte of Dummer, N.H., was not, police Lt. Michael Dailey said.

According to Lt. Michael Dailey of the Paris police, a 1998 Buick Century driven by 31-year-old Katie Brett of Paris was traveling south at 11:30 a.m. and had stopped to let a northbound car pass before she attempted to turn into Doe's Variety. Her car was hit by a Freightliner fuel truck driven by 53-year-old William LeTarte of Dummer, N.H. The truck was lettered with "Bill LeTarte Trucking" of Dummer.

The truck crushed the back half of Brett's car then pushed it across the northbound lane. A 2001 Ford pickup driven by Gloria Hadley, 57, of West Paris then struck the side of the truck as it crossed the road, tearing off one of the tractor-trailer's fuel tanks, Dailey said. The tank had an estimated 60 to 80 gallons of fuel, he said.

"It's amazing the people got out of it the way they did," Dailey said.

The driver of the 18-wheeler was not injured.

Both women were taken to Stephens Memorial Hospital where they were treated and released, he said. Firefighters at the scene said Hadley complained of a hip injury. A woman who ran to the scene of the accident said Brett, a local mail carrier, was conscious but disoriented.

“We were right in the middle of what happened,” said Doe's Market owner Doreen Brown, who was busy serving lunchtime customers when the crash occurred.

“It was a humongous bang. We could hear the truck driver's brakes before it happened,” she said.

Brown and others inside the convenience store/luncheon business ran outside to help the drivers. Brown said when she looked inside the wrecked car she recognized the woman behind the wheel as a former employee.

“She used to work here. It was awful,” Brown said, adding the woman was conscious and talking but confused.

The impact of the crash tore the fuel tank from the underside of the tractor-trailer, releasing a stream of fuel onto the highway. The road was closed to traffic for several hours.

Norway Fire Chief Dennis Yates said firefighters were attempting to divert the fuel that spilled  from a nearby storm drain. The accident was across the street from the Little Androscoggin River.

“We're trying to keep the fuel above the water,” Yates said of efforts to dig trenches in the pouring rain and lay white booms on the ground to separate the clean water from the fuel.

The Department of Environmental Protection and an accident reconstruction team from the Maine State Police were also at the scene.

Dailey said the accident is still under investigation but it appears that the truck driver may have been distracted.

ldixon@sunjounral.com

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

Oxford Dad's picture

Trucker Distraction!!!!!

Surprise, Surprise!! I would like to hear what he was so distracted by? Its a shame. Rte 26 is just like any other road. Its not dangerous at all.Driving is simple, PAY ATTENTION. Thats it, thats all you need to do!!!!!! I dont know why people make this harder then it is!!!!

mainermike's picture

MAINER MIKE BROWN's Viewpoint

It's incredible how quickly accidents happen. So many people that have never been in one don't realize that all of a sudden BAM! Your life can be changed forever.

Some people don't like the government telling us what to do more and more these days, such as by creating seat belt laws. But if it saves lives, I say it's worth it.

Bilgerat's picture

Rt. 26

Oh hum, just another accident on Rt. 26. Drivers speeding, falling asleep after a long weekend on the slopes, passing on a solid line, distracted, tailgating (not illegal in Maine), on the phone (not illegal in Maine) or texting (not illegal in Maine) it doesn't make any difference one sees it all too frequently. That route is one of the most dangerous in the state. Darn good thing nobody was decapitated this time. With the danger of the truckers and the Mass & New Hampshire drivers, delivering the mail on that road should include hazardous duty pay and a thank you from all that are served.

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