The carnage started by the State Fairgrounds in Falcon Heights with a head-on crash early Tuesday. Then came a morning rush-hour rollover on the Mendota Bridge that snarled traffic for a couple of hours. That was followed by a crash in which a semitrailer truck hit a pedestrian, causing a 90-minute shutdown of a downtown Minneapolis freeway.
In fewer than eight hours: three crashes, four deaths.
"That's unusual," said Lt. Tiffani Nielson of the State Patrol. "Over a long weekend, we might have four to five and we'd consider that high."
On average, the state records about only one fatal crash a day.
The deaths on Tuesday pushed the number of people who have died on Minnesota roads this year to 127, the same number of people who had died as of this time last year.
And that comes just ahead of the Memorial Day weekend (which is five days later this year than it was in 2015), which is not only the unofficial kickoff to summer, but the beginning of a four-month period when traffic fatalities and serious injuries tend to spike.
"Summer is more dangerous than winter," Nielson said. "People drive faster when weather is good. People might be feeling good or have plans to enjoy the weather, and speed goes up."
Deborah A.P. Hersman, president and CEO of the National Safety Council, said drivers can't take safety for granted in the carefree summer months. "Driving is one of the riskiest things we do every day," she said.