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| BREAKING NEWS: Bodies recovered from canal crash |
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| Written by John Saiz and Jonathan Partridge | Patterson Irrigator | |
| Tuesday, 15 July 2008 | |
![]() Stanislaus County Sheriff's Dive Team assesses the situation before entering the Delta-Mendota Canal, where two vehicles collided and entered the water. Photo by Elias Funez
Police suspect at least seven people — six farm laborers from Lodi
and the driver of a septic truck — died when two vehicles collided and
plunged into the Delta-Mendota Canal at Needham Road at about 12:15
p.m. Tuesday.
Araceli Martinez, niece of Adan Martinez and cousin
of Lucas Martinez, said it appeared that law enforcement agents and
dive team members were just standing around. She expressed frustration
that the dive team was keeping family members from getting close to the
scene and helping out.
![]() People console one another after arriving at the scene of the accident. Photo by Elias Funez The nine members of the dive team were briefed before they went underwater and they wanted to be safe, he said. As it was, dive team members had to deal with rushing currents, cold water, murky conditions and a canal that was 16 to 18 feet deep. The SUV was stuck under a bridge at one point, and the quick currents there made it a challenge, Letras said. By late evening, the dive team members had spent the maximum number of hours they were allowed to be underwater, which is why the Borges Auto Service diver decided to assist. After the CHP had removed the doors of the SUV with the "jaws of life," CHP took family members individually to the crash scene to help identify victims. As of midnight, most of those victims had not been identified. However, Letras did say that the car contained three males and one female. Family members said Lucas Martinez and Adriana Garcia were both missing from the SUV, and that Tapia and Eulalia Garcia were among those inside the vehicle. ![]() Skid marks indicate where the two vehicles entered the Delta-Mendota Canal at about noon Tuesday. Photo by Elias Funez “It’s been a really long day for the family,” Walsh said. One of those family members, Julian Perez-Cruz, said through a translator that his cousin, Alizar Gomez, was from Chiapas, Mexico, and hoped to save up money to build a house for his parents there. Meanwhile, the teenage daughter of Eulalia Garcia said she talked to her mother on the phone at around 11 a.m., shortly before the accident. Her mother said she was on her way home. A few area residents said such accidents are far too common in the area. “They need to do something,” said Juan Martinez, who has worked in the area for about 17 years. “There are a lot of accidents in this canal.” Tuesday’s accident came less than three years after a nearby accident on the western bank of the canal claimed the lives of four farm laborers from Stockton. On Nov. 22, 15-year-old Dimas Ornelas was driving a van filled with farm workers when it plunged into the canal. His brother, 17-year-old Miguel Ornelas, was able to grab hold of a side access ladder and climb to safety, but the driver and three other passengers drowned. Unfortunately, major vehicle accidents along the canal are all too common, lifelong Westley resident Hope Trevino said — a tradition that many could do away with. “It never fails — during this time there are like two or three accidents that happen around here every year,” she said.
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