Sponsored Links

UPDATE 1-Injured NASCAR fan calls crash 'scene from a horror movie'

Wed Feb 27, 2013 10:10pm EST

By Barbara Liston

ORLANDO, Fla. Feb 27 (Reuters) - The last thing NASCAR fan Whitney Turner saw before she turned and ran was the undercarriage of Kyle Larson's race car flying toward her Saturday in the grandstands at the Daytona International Speedway.

"It was a scene from a horror movie," said Turner, 33, whose fibula bone on her right leg was shattered by flying debris.

Turner of Tell City, Indiana, was one of more than 30 fans injured in a multi-car accident on the last lap of the Nationwide Series race a day before Sunday's prestigious Daytona 500.

Turner is one of three fans seeking damages who this week signed on with Matt Morgan of the Orlando personal injury law firm Morgan & Morgan.

Turner's lawyer said, based on NASCAR history, "a lot of times they resolve these claims without having to go through litigation. So hopefully we can come to an amicable resolution on the value of these claims and move on."

The injuries happened when rookie driver Larson's car went airborne and sailed into the fence in the frightening crash, although he was able to climb out of the wreckage afterward.

Crews worked through the night to repair the fence so the Daytona 500 race could go on as planned. The speedway is owned by International Speedway Corporation

TRIED TO RUN FOR SAFETY

A lifelong NASCAR fan attending the race in Daytona for the first time, Turner said she had a front row seat and was standing as close as possible to the safety fence that separates fans from the track when the accident occurred.

Turner's seat was just three seats away from the fence's crossover gate, which is being looked at as possibly the spot where large debris entered the stands.

As the cars came around turn four, Turner said fans started yelling that there was a crash. Turner said she saw smoke, and cars turning around in the air, spewing debris.

"You can see them turn sideways and then all of a sudden they're getting closer. It happened so fast," she said, describing how she saw the belly of a car hit the fence as she turned away and tried to make a run for it.

Turner said she took about two steps back toward her seat when something knocked her down.

"The only thing I can remember is trying to stand back up and my leg, I could feel it snap," she said.

She recalled looking around and seeing a car engine on fire where a commercial video camera and a cameraman wearing a media identification tag stood moments earlier. She heard people moaning in their seats, and described the sounds around her.

"People yelling for help. 'There's a young boy.' 'Please come help us.' And I was screaming 'Help me! Medic! Medic!' ..... Then it all went like silent. Everyone was stunned," she said.

Medical personnel came to her aid and took her to the hospital. Doctors told her that, in addition to the fractured fibula, the debris sliced her Achilles tendon. Her leg was too swollen for a cast right after the accident but she expects to get one next week.

Turner, who works for a marketing firm, said she has been watching NASCAR races for as long as she can remember, and previously attended two races in North Carolina. Despite her injuries, Turner said she would return to the races.

"I can tell you I won't be in the first row again," she said.

NASCAR spokesman David Higdon said that, while the racing group does not discuss pending or potential litigation, "We'll likely provide an update on our next steps at our next race, which is this weekend in Phoenix."

A waiver on the back of the race tickets says that fans assume all risks, a disclaimer Morgan said was typical for sporting events and active locales such as ski resorts.

"Arguments can go both ways," as to whether the waiver absolves the company of all liability, Morgan said.

He said he had not yet determined whether courts had ruled on that issue.

"I don't believe, in my limited research, that NASCAR has many - if any - pending lawsuits against them right now," Morgan said.

He said he will focus attention on engineering studies on the safety fence at the Talladega Superspeedway after flying debris injured fans after a similar crash in 2009.

We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/
Comments (4)
canofwhoopass wrote:
Sue happy attorneys going for the money hole as usual!

Feb 27, 2013 11:31pm EST  --  Report as abuse
bobcat4910 wrote:
It’s ironic that she sat in the front row, and stood “as close as she could get”, while security spends most of its time ushering people BACK from the catch fence, for their own safety, and NOW seeks damages from exactly the thing the security is trying to protect you from.
More ironic, she hopes to attend in the future as well. Will she again sit “as close as possible” and stand where they reccomend you DON’T stand, again? Note; almost nobody was injured beyond the very front rows, which are mandated vacant at many small tracks I’ve attended, for the exact reason demonstrated in this instance.
Personally, if she sues Nascar for “their negligence”, I find it offensive she would ever attend another event, where such “negligence” is a possibility. She COULD “assume all responsibility” for her choices and not attempt to cash in on an accident, and possibly harm the sport she professes to be such a fan of.

Feb 27, 2013 11:38pm EST  --  Report as abuse
Angel62851 wrote:
They ain’t fooling nobody….they came to see the wrecks !!! Anybody that says they didn’t, are liars…. She said herself, she was as close as she could get……EVERYBODY knows…cars going that speed can wreck….I think it even says on the tickets to get in, that it’s pretty much a waiver…JUST for that reason…Anybody that thinks a cyclone fence will stop a car doing almost 200 miles an hour, shouldn’t be at the races….drive down the streets of ur town and see how many have been driven thru by cars going 30….. If the seat u were sitting in collapsed, that’s one thing…their fault!!!! But suing because of the accident…..no dice….ur just trying to make money off of it !!!!!

Feb 28, 2013 1:25am EST  --  Report as abuse
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.