Two people are dead after their semitrailer exploded when it hit another semi parked illegally on the side of Interstate 80 near Green River on Sunday.
The crash scene âwas a pretty bad one,â said Green River Fire Department Assistant Chief Larry Erdmann. âIt was almost like a movie scene.â
Usually with a highway crash involving fire, thereâs debris scattered about, âThen if the vehicle catches fire, itâs down the road a little,â he told Cowboy State Daily on Monday morning.
âOn this one, the explosion seems to have happened on impact,â he added.
That corresponds with the initial information reported by the Wyoming Highway Patrol, said agency spokesman Aaron Brown.
Troopers were dispatched at 5:23 a.m. to the crash on eastbound I-80 near mile marker 93, he said.
âWhat had happened was a semitruck was parked on the right side of the highway ⌠and at that point, illegally parked,â Brown said. âAnother semi, for reasons that we do not know, drifted from the left side of the highway to the right and struck the trailer of the parked semi.â
With that collision, âthe second semi basically exploded on impact,â he added.
Both people in the second truck were killed, while the driver of the parked truck was reportedly outside the cab at the time of the collision, Brown said.
He also explained that the first truck was illegally parked because there was no apparent emergency, and parking is only allowed for emergencies.
âIt was mostly on the shoulder,â he said. âHowever, I believe the way it was explained to me is they werenât parked for an emergency, it was for something else.
âAnd so, it was an illegal parking and (the driver) was issued a summons for illegal parking instead of a citation.â
The crash closed the eastbound lanes of I-80 throughout the morning, finally reopening shortly before noon, Erdmann said.
Containing The Fire
Brown said thereâs no information yet about why the second truck veered all the way from the left lane, through the right and into the trailer of the parked semi.
âWe didnât get the occupants out until well into the fire, so thereâs no way of telling what was going on,â he said, adding that they were from California.
In 29 years of volunteering with the Green River Fire Department, Erdmann said it never gets easier responding to fatal crashes.
Firefighters fought the fire with 10 people manning an engine and water tender, said Erdmann, who was the incident commander for the department.
In addition to putting down the flames engulfing the truck, which was a total loss, firefighters also extinguished spot fires and nearby burning grass, he said.
A vehicle fire like Sundayâs âis more difficult to control the fire, because as youâre spraying water on it to extinguish it, it also splashes the fluids around and you have to chase that down.â
By the time his crews got to the scene, the cab of the semi was burning and âhad already started into some of the grasses,â Erdmann said. âThe first thing we did was make sure we contained the fire to the truck.â
The department also called out a local business, the Hitching Post Restaurant and Saloon, for bringing the emergency responders free breakfast burritos after theyâd been at the scene for hours.
It was a generous gesture that the department wanted to call out, said Nancy Rider, coordinator of the agencyâs Third Alarm spousesâ group.
âLiving in a small community like this ⌠weâve found out what this town is all about,â she said. âThey didnât bat an eye, just said, âWeâll donate it all.ââ
Greg Johnson can be reached at greg@cowboystatedaily.com.







