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41 hurt in bus, truck crash in Nebraska

Five people are being treated at a hospital after a Denver-bound bus rammed into an overturned semitrailer on Interstate 80 in south Nebraska early Thursday. Most passengers suffered minor injuries.
/ Source: The Associated Press

A Denver-bound bus rammed into an overturned semitrailer in central Nebraska early Thursday, injuring dozens of people including five who were hospitalized.

The Nebraska State Patrol said 41 people, including the bus and semi drivers, were taken to a hospital in Kearney, about 180 miles west of Omaha, after the accident on Interstate 80 around 2 a.m.

The majority of them were able to board a new bus and continue their trip a few hours later, American Red Cross officials said.

Good Samaritan Hospital spokeswoman Marsha Wilkerson said 30 people were treated and released, and some refused treatment. Of the five admitted, one was in critical condition and one was in serious condition. The other three patients were in fair condition.

Nebraska State Patrol spokeswoman Deb Collins said the semitrailer overturned after the driver drifted into the median and overcorrected.

The vehicle came to rest on its side blocking the westbound lanes near Gibbon, and a second semitrailer truck clipped the overturned trailer and ended up in a ditch. Then the bus ran into the overturned semitrailer and collided with the interstate median.

Collins said the bus driver — 50-year-old Michelle Anderson, of Omaha — and 39-year-old Mohamed Aguini, of Antioch, Tenn., the driver of the first semi, were among those admitted to the hospital.

The 61-year-old driver of the second truck was not hurt.

Collins said it wasn't immediately clear how long the first truck had been blocking the interstate before the second truck and bus hit it. The accident closed the I-80 for about 4 ½ hours. It reopened around 6:30 a.m.

The passengers who were treated and released from the hospital spent about two hours at an American Red Cross shelter until the bus operator, Burlington Trailways, could get another bus there. They continued on their trip around 8:30 a.m.

Red Cross volunteer Clarence Davis said the passengers seemed to be in decent shape considering what they had been through.

"Most of them are still in shock, but they're doing OK," Davis said.

American Bus Association spokesman Dan Ronan said federal transportation records show Burlington Trailways, based in West Burlington, Iowa, has a clean safety record with no accidents in the past two years. Data for previous years wasn't immediately available.

Ronan said Anderson has had her commercial license for nearly 10 years, including seven years driving for Burlington Trailways. He said she had logged 824,000 miles without an accident.

The bus was new, having been put into service just two weeks ago, and was fully equipped with seatbelts. Ronan said seatbelts are now required on commercial buses but that passengers are not required to buckle up.

The State Patrol was investigating the accident.