Driver who hit Girl Scouts, killing four, was 'huffing' chemicals, police said Breaking News Emails Get breaking news alerts and spe...
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Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.SUBSCRIBEBy Minyvonne BurkeThe Wisconsin man who struck a Girl Scouts troop while they were picking up trash on the side of a road, killing three children and a parent and injuring a fourth girl, admitted he was inhaling chemical vapors before the crash, police said Monday.
Colten Treu, 21, is being held at the Chippewa County Jail on four counts of homicide by negligent use of a motor vehicle, five counts of hit and run and four counts of homicide while intoxicated, Lake Hallie Police Chief Cal D. Smokowicz said.
Treu is scheduled to appear in court on Monday for a bond hearing.
Treu was arrested Saturday afternoon after police said he r an into Girl Scouts members around 11:40 a.m. while they were doing community service on County Highway P in Lake Hallie, a village in Chippewa County northeast of Eau Claire.
Seven children and five adults, all wearing green safety vests, were in a ditch on the side of the road picking up trash at the time of the crash, police said.
Three Girl Scouts members were killed along with a parent. Police identified the victims as Jayna Kelley, 9; Autumn Helgeson, 10; Haylee Hickle, 10; and her mother Sara Jo Schneider, 32.
A fourth girl was injured and taken to the hospital in critical condition. Police said Monday she is now in stable condition. The Lake Hallie Police Department said the girls were members of Troop 3055 in Chippewa Falls.
Treu's black Ford F-150 pickup truck was traveling north when it crossed over a lane into the ditch and hit the group, police said. Treu fled the scene after the crash, but later surrendered, police said.
Treu and a passenger said they were intentionally inhaling chemical vapors, known as 'huffing,' prior to the accident, the Lake Hallie Police Department said.
The three girls killed in the accident attended Halmstad Elementary School and Southview Elementary school in Chippewa Falls, school officials said in a statement Sunday.
Girl Scouts of the USA CEO Sylvia Acevedo issued a statement expressing condolences to the families saying the organization was heartbroken over the deaths.
âWe ask for privacy for the council, and for the families who are mourning the tragic loss of loved ones today. The Girl Scout Movement everywhere stands with our sister Girl Scouts in Wisconsin to grieve and comfort one another in the wake of this terrible tragedy," she said.
Source: Google News | Netizen 24 United States
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