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Cornelius Gerhardus van Rooyen, commonly known by the nicknames "Gert" and "Bokkie", was born in South Africa on 11 April 1938. He is assumed to have been the sole killer, although neither the South African Police nor its post-apartheid successor organisation, the South African Police Service, have conducted full and conclusive investigations since his suicide.
Three young men were killed when the car they were in ploughed into a vehicle driven by a ‘devoted’ mother on the A63 near Hull.
Boaks was injured in a minor road traffic crash while getting off a bus. His death in hospital two years later was the result of complications from the head injuries sustained. Tony Boeckel: 1892 1924 31 years American baseball player car San Diego, California Cris Bolado: 1969 2017 47 years Filipino basketball player motorcycle Phnom Penh ...
According to the release, Harwich Patrol Officer Jessica Ferreira, parked along Queen Anne Road in Harwich, observed a 2017 BMW passing her location at 10:45 p.m. on Monday night, at a speed ...
The car went from 60 to 100 mph in 3.08 seconds before reaching 100 to 150 mph in an additional 2.97 seconds, a video posted to his Instagram showed. “It’s just a BMW,” the post was captioned.
This list of traffic collisions records serious road crashes: those that have a large death toll, occurred in unusual circumstances, or have some other historical significance. For crashes that killed notable people, refer to List of people who died in traffic collisions. The prevalence of bus crashes in this list is a function of severity ...
January 9 – Iran – An accident on a bus heading from Tehran to Gonbad in Mazandaran killed 20 and injured 24. [343] January 10 – India – A double-decker bus caught fire after ramming into a truck in Kannauj, killing 20. [344] March 2 – South Africa – Centane bus crash. A 65-seater bus plunged into a gorge, killing 25 and injuring 62.
Intentional traffic collisions may be a chosen method of suicide where speed limits are high enough to produce fatal deceleration. [2] Modern cars have high rates of acceleration and can easily reach very high speeds in short distances, while most cannot protect occupants in frontal impact collisions exceeding 70 km/h (43 mph). [ 3 ]