Teens die in car in icy pond
Mar. 1st, 2007 09:57 amI wish there were a little more factual information in this article. Five teens driving to school went off the road and into an icy pond. It took rescue crews 2 hours to get the car out, at which time the kids were found with their Bibles in their laps, still buckled into their seats, two already dead and the other three did not make it.
The part that's confusing me is if they had time to get their Bibles out, why did they not try to get out of the car?
The part that's confusing me is if they had time to get their Bibles out, why did they not try to get out of the car?
no subject
Date: 2007-03-02 12:10 am (UTC)Obviously chosing to remain inside the car for two hours in its/their condition in an icy pond was a fatal choice. Would their chances have been better had they attempted to escape at some point during the process? Or were they doomed the moment the car hit the water?
Not to mention that we could've learned something about the reason the car went off the road in the first place. I read recently, I forget where, some statistic like teens who have other teens as passengers are four times more likely to have an accident than the average driver. They formed the conclusion that teens shouldn't drive other teens as they're easily distracted. I suspect that is the cause, but who knows if I'll ever find out.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-02 05:49 am (UTC)From this article and the fact that they used divers, the car was probably completely submerged underwater, in a lake that might have been quite deep. They might not have been able to open the doors at all, or had anything at hand (or the presence of mind) to break a window. We also don't know if the car stayed dry on the inside, or started flooding, so it's not clear what the effect of breaking a window would have been.
no subject
Date: 2007-03-02 05:50 am (UTC)