CHIPPEWA FALLS, WIS. – Holding candles in paper cups and huddling beneath a sea of umbrellas, the crowd was quiet except for the occasional voices of girls wearing green or tan vests.
They softly sang "Make New Friends" and "On My Honor," old Girl Scout standards that took on a new meaning during the emotional vigil Sunday night.
Hundreds gathered in the rain to remember the three Girl Scouts and a parent who were struck and killed by a pickup truck that left the road while they picked up trash along a rural highway in western Wisconsin.
The driver fled the scene and later surrendered to authorities. The identities of the victims will be released Monday morning.
"It was heartbreaking," Tabatha Kolve, 18, said of the tragedy in the nearby community of Lake Hallie.
Kolve, a Girl Scout and a troop leader, helped her fourth-graders assemble 150 candles for the vigil. She drove in from Eleva-Strum, 30 minutes away. "There isn't much to say because it was so upsetting."
At a news conference Sunday afternoon, the Chippewa Falls School District said two of the fourth-graders who died attended Halmstad Elementary. A mother who was chaperoning and her daughter, from Southview Elementary, also were killed.
"This is a difficult time for our students, our family and our staff," said Superintendent Heidi Eliopoulos, who wore a kelly green ribbon from the Girl Scouts. She said about 15 Scouts and chaperones were involved in the cleanup project.