Advertisement

Adult, not teen, was driver in deadly Texas crash that killed college golf team members, NTSB says

Adult, not teen, was driver in deadly Texas crash that killed college golf team members, NTSB says

Federal investigators revealed new details Thursday in the fatal crash that killed nine people, including seven members of a college golf team, in March, and said that contrary to its initial findings a 38-year-old man was behind the wheel, not a teenage boy.

The National Transportation Safety Board released a report that said a DNA test from the scene of the March 15 accident near Andrews, Texas, determined the adult was driving the 2007 Dodge pickup truck that hit the van carrying the University of the Southwest's men's and women's golf teams. Police identified the 38-year-old as Henrich Siemens.

MORE: 13-year-old driving truck in crash that killed 7 members of college golf team: NTSB

Robert Molloy, the director of the NTSB's Office of Highway Safety, told reporters Thursday that investigators made that initial determination that the 13-year-old passenger was the driver based on information available at the time and noted that the wreck was "catastrophic."

PHOTO: Emergency responders work the scene of a fatal crash late Tuesday, March 15, 2022 in Andrews County, Texas. (NewsWest 9 KWES-TV via AP, FILE)
PHOTO: Emergency responders work the scene of a fatal crash late Tuesday, March 15, 2022 in Andrews County, Texas. (NewsWest 9 KWES-TV via AP, FILE)

"This made understanding some of the details of the crash very difficult," he said.

ADVERTISEMENT

Siemens and the teenager also died in the crash.

The report said that further toxicological tests found "the presence of methamphetamine in the pickup truck driver’s blood."

"We know it was found in his system and we know meth can affect driver performance … but at this point, it's too early to say if the finding we have in the toxicology report had any factor in this crash," Molloy said.

PHOTO: Texas Department of Public Safety Troopers look over the scene of a fatal wreck involving a van carrying members of the University of the Southwest men's and women's golf teams in Andrews County, Texas, March 16, 2022. (Eli Hartman/Odessa American via AP, FILE)
PHOTO: Texas Department of Public Safety Troopers look over the scene of a fatal wreck involving a van carrying members of the University of the Southwest men's and women's golf teams in Andrews County, Texas, March 16, 2022. (Eli Hartman/Odessa American via AP, FILE)

The crash took place when the truck crossed the centerline on Farm-to-Market Road 1788 and crashed head-on into the van occupied by a driver and eight passengers from the school, according to the NTSB's latest report.

MORE: Coach, 6 members of college golf team among 9 killed in head-on Texas crash

The golf team's coach and six athletes were killed, police said. Two other team members suffered serious injuries and were hospitalized, according to the police.

PHOTO: A golfer drives by a makeshift memorial at the Rockwind Community Links, on March 16, 2022, in Hobbs, N.M. (John Locher/AP, FILE)
PHOTO: A golfer drives by a makeshift memorial at the Rockwind Community Links, on March 16, 2022, in Hobbs, N.M. (John Locher/AP, FILE)

Molloy said the families of the victims were notified of the report and the new findings prior to its release.

The NTSB report also reversed another preliminary statement made by the NTSB shortly after the crash. New analysis found that, contrary to initial reports, there was no "evidence of a sudden or rapid loss of tire air pressure or any other indicators of catastrophic failure of the pickup truck’s front left tire."

Molloy said the investigation is continuing and the agency expects to have a full report and findings sometime in 2023.

Adult, not teen, was driver in deadly Texas crash that killed college golf team members, NTSB says originally appeared on abcnews.go.com