A second multiple-victim crash within a week has killed three teens and a 20-year-old — bringing to seven the number of young men killed in similar broadside collisions on icy Minnesota highways.
The latest victims died Friday night after the car they were in slid out of control outside Sleepy Eye, 105 miles southwest of Minneapolis in south-central Minnesota, the State Patrol said. Four others were injured, none critically, when the car and a pickup truck collided shortly before 8:30 p.m. on two-lane Hwy. 14 in Brown County.
Killed were John D. Mangen, 18, of Fairfax; Caleb B. Quesenberry, 17, of St. Peter; Payton R. Adams, 17, of Sleepy Eye; and Tyler S. Hadley, 20, of Sleepy Eye. All were passengers in the car.
"It's a big shock for our community here," said John Cselovszki, superintendent of Sleepy Eye public schools.
The deadly crash came exactly one week after three Carleton College students died near Northfield when their SUV went out of control on the ice and slid into the path of a semitrailer truck.
Friday, a 2003 Pontiac Grand Prix driven by Kansas Adams, 19, was going west on Hwy. 14 when he lost control on an icy curve. The car slid into the eastbound lane and was hit broadside on the passenger side by a 1999 Dodge Ram pickup, the patrol said.
Kansas Adams suffered serious injuries and remained hospitalized Saturday. He was the only one in the car known to be wearing a seat belt, State Patrol Lt. Eric Roeske said, adding that Kansas was Payton Adams' brother.
It wasn't known if the car's front-seat passenger was wearing a seat belt, but none of those in the back seat were, Roeske said.