Officials said two adults were killed and seven children were injured, one of whom at the age of 1, in an off-roading park in Alabama, in the weekend, in the weekend, the officials said. No person living while riding in the vehicle wore proper restrictions or harness, crashed in a remote section of the park.
Side-by-side Rzr, an ATV model, which was crowded with nine people, another ATV hit on Saturday, Pidmont’s Indian Mountain ATV Park overturned from a tree at Pidmont’s Indian Mountain ATV Park and Shaun Rogers, director of the emergency management agency of Cherokee County, said during a news conference on Sunday.
The male driver was expelled from the vehicle and declared dead on the spot.
Cherokee County Sheriff Jeff Chevver said that it seems that the deceased driver was operating ATV at a high rate when he hit another vehicle, whose driver tried to escape the collision.
Both Rogers and Chevor were among the county officials, who emphasized how important it is to follow the relevant security protocol in any vehicle, such as wearing restrictions and after the accident, carrying the right number of people.
“It is a tragic accident and highlights the importance of operating RZR and other recreational vehicles in a safe and responsible manner,” the shaver said.
Sheriff’s office is awaited for the results of toxic science to determine whether alcohol is a factor farming. It is illegal to keep alcohol outside the municipalities in Cherokee County, which has been drought since the prohibition era a century ago.
The location of the accident was remote, the Cherokee County officials said, “Challenging for the first respondents and employees in ATV Park need to take emergency employees to the site.”
Four medical helicopters took an adult woman and three children to the trauma centers in Birmingham. Officials said the woman later died of injuries. The ambulances took the other four children to a hospital in Rome, Georgia.
Rogers said that officials have been told that one of the nine in ATV was not exploited or restrained.
“I am sure that it is not recommended not to use security harness in nine people, especially young children, an RZR,” the shaver said.
Rogers said, “There is nothing that says that everyone who is found in side-by-side has to stop.” “This is one of the things that have to take personal responsibility, to ensure their safety and safety of those who are in your care.”
The injured children were at the age of 1 to 12 years. Cherokee County Coroner Paul McDonald said in a lesson to Associated Press Sunday that the one who died was the father of all seven children and the woman was the mother of three children.
According to McDonald, all the victims were from Georgia.
“Such scenes are always difficult, especially when they include children,” the coroner said in a statement. “Please do everything to ensure the safety of yourself and the people around you.”
No identity pending family information has been issued. Rogers said that the authorities did not know the medical condition of any child or updated on their terms.
In the second ATV, two people were not injured and tried to provide assistance, the shaver said.
The accident site was in a remote place inside the park and it was difficult to access. About 75 miles north -north of Birmingham, ATV Park employees were to take medical personnel to the spot.
The Sheriff Office is leading the investigation of the accident with the help of the office of McDonald’s.
The Indian Mountain ATV Park states on its website that at a distance of just 7 square miles in the Appalachian mountain range, it is one of the largest private off-road parks in the south.
On Sunday, a woman who responded to the phone in the park said that the officers were meeting with the lawyer and later can issue a statement.