February 11, 2009 2:29 PM

911 Calls Reveal Texas Bus Wreck Carnage

(AP)  Witnesses to the crash of a charter busload of Vietnamese Catholics that killed at least 17 people described a chaotic scene, telling emergency workers of bloody passengers crushed beneath the smoking wreckage, according to calls released Saturday by police.

The unlicensed bus carrying 55 members of a Vietnamese Catholic group from Houston to Carthage, Missouri, for a religious festival smashed into a guardrail and skidded off a highway early Friday near the Texas-Oklahoma state line. Twelve people died at the scene and five more died at hospitals.

One emergency call began with a female crash victim speaking in accented English over the screams and moans of other passengers. After struggling to answer the operator's questions, she handed the phone to a man who had apparently arrived at the scene immediately after the crash.

"We've got people crushed underneath the bus," the man said. "The bus is smoking. It might catch fire."

A female caller told an emergency operator that there were passengers "just everywhere out here laid out on the ground. They are bloody." Another caller said: "There's people screaming for help."

Most of the passengers were from the Vietnamese Martyrs Church and two other mostly Vietnamese congregations in Houston, heading to an annual festival honoring the Virgin Mary. The Marian Days pilgrimage, which started in the late 1970s, attracts thousands of Catholics of Vietnamese descent and includes a large outdoor Mass each day, entertainment and camping at night.

By late Saturday morning, traffic was back to normal and a damaged guardrail had been replaced. Several bouquets of carnations, tulips and roses were left on an embankment amid shards of glass and burned grass.

Authorities said the vehicle's right front tire, which blew out, had been retreaded in a manner that violated safety standards, said Debbie Hersman, a member of the National Transportation Safety Board.

After the tire blew out, the bus skidded about 130 feet before striking a guardrail, Hersman said. It then traveled nearly 120 feet before coming to rest down the embankment.

The driver, 52-year-old Barrett Wayne Broussard, had a commercial license, but his medical certification expired in May, according to the NTSB. Broussard was stable at a hospital. Authorities took blood samples from him Friday but do not have the results, Hersman said.

Broussard was convicted in 2001 of driving while intoxicated in Houston and sentenced to 10 days in prison and a $225 fine, according to state records. He has also been arrested at least three other times and was sentenced to two years in prison in 1998 for violating probation.

The bus operator, Iguala BusMex Inc. of Houston, had applied in June for a federal license to operate as a charter but was still awaiting approval, according to online records. The company recently filed incorporation papers, listing the same owner and address as Angel Tours Inc., which was forced by federal regulators to take its vehicles out of interstate service June 23 after an unsatisfactory review.

The review cited the company for problems in three areas: using a driver before receiving a pre-employment result, failing to require a driver to prepare a vehicle inspection report and using a driver who wasn't medically re-examined every two years.

A May 1 review by the Federal Motor Carriers Safety Administration cited the company for violations including a lax drug and alcohol testing program, Hersman said. Two of five drivers did not have current medical certificates, and 27 of 28 vehicle inspections were missing, she said.

Neither entity - Iguala nor Angel - is authorized to operate as a carrier in interstate commerce, according to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.

The bus was registered under temporary tags that were to expire Saturday, Hersman said. The NTSB is looking into the history of the sale of the bus, which was sold by a bus company in New York.

A man at Angel Tours in Houston declined to comment Friday. The company's voicemail system was full Saturday and not accepting new messages, and no one answered Saturday at a listing for the company's attorney.

Vu Pham, 35, of Houston, said his brother, sister-in-law, mother and 12-year-old nephew were on the bus. His brother, whose left leg has been paralyzed since he was a boy because of polio, remained in intensive care Saturday in a Sherman hospital, he said.

"We thought it would be better for him to get on the bus because it's a far drive," Pham said. "Now he keeps saying that he should have driven himself."

Authorities on Saturday released the names and ages of the 11 women and six men who died. The youngest was Thuy Thu Vu, 27, and the oldest was 89-year-old Cham T. Nguyen, who died at Harris Methodist Hospital in Fort Worth.

It was the deadliest U.S. bus crash since 2004, when 15 people were killed in a wreck in Arkansas on their way to Mississippi's casinos. In 2005, 23 people were killed near Dallas when a bus carrying nursing home residents away from Hurricane Rita caught fire in bumper-to-bumper traffic.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by avigil2 August 11, 2008 5:41 PM EDT
Posted by onemoretim: The same question could be asked of another famous (imfamous) former Texas Governor.

What the heck does this have to do with this horrific crash?

Posted by trishab4: -Virgin Mary was not of much help. She was busy doing things and cooking, huh!

That was a pretty crappy low blow! Some of you people here amaze me.
Reply to this comment
by messiahx4eve August 11, 2008 4:57 PM EDT
It''s truly tragic when human lives are compared to dollars in saving money by using WRONG sized RETREAD tires. So take the victims and divide the number of lives lost by the cost of using a shoddy replacement tire instead of a new one, compare the difference and that is what each life was worth to this and any other company nowadays in public services. The gears have shifted from SERVICES to NECESSITIES & they could care less about proper maintenence of any thing that services the public. Actions and attitudes such as portrayed in todays society is why I believe in a HIGHER power within our lives & nature, not the one of christian mythology.
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by niftynana August 11, 2008 12:44 PM EDT
I am shocked and appalled at the heartless and cruel comments about this tragedy by previous writers. Where is your humanity? I wish to express my sorrow for the loss of human life to the families and friends of the victims of this senseless "accident." I am not sure "accident" is the correct descriptive term and hope that whoever is responsible for such horrendous negligence meets Lady Justice.
NiftyNana
Reply to this comment
by fgwbush August 10, 2008 11:56 PM EDT
Retread tires kill thousands and cause many more thousands of dollars of damage every year;why can''t they be outlawed?
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by chyenna-2009 August 10, 2008 2:31 PM EDT
While we''re sitting here throwing nasty comments around about the Lord and Texans, lives were lost, many are fighting for their lives and family members are suffering emotional pain. Do you God and Texas haters have no compassion for the pain of others?
Reply to this comment
by trishab4 August 10, 2008 2:10 PM EDT
CBS: Most of the passengers were from the Vietnamese Martyrs Church and two other mostly Vietnamese congregations in Houston, heading to an annual festival honoring the Virgin Mary.

-Virgin Mary was not of much help. She was busy doing things and cooking, huh!

Reply to this comment
by cbsblogger August 10, 2008 11:41 AM EDT
I can almost assure you that, as usual, the principals and owners of this tour bus company will not face personal accountability through the criminal justice system. It rarely if ever happens just as in cases of illegal immigrant hiring. Our criminal justice system focuses on the little guy and rarely the business people that also create victims.
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