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Amber Alert

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Fatal pileup began with Parr's skid

John Parr was driving through a near whiteout when he skidded on an icy Wyoming highway, triggering a string of collisions that left Parr, his wife and daughter dead.

Conditions on Interstate 80 near Rawlins were so bad that shortly after a tractor-trailer slammed into Parr's Subaru station wagon on Saturday, another seven vehicles piled up 5 miles from the accident site, according to the Wyoming Highway Patrol. Two people were injured in that crash.

The Wyoming Highway Patrol issued three citations in the chain-reaction crashes that killed Parr, 59, a prominent Denver political consultant, his wife, Sandra Widener, 53, and their daughter, Chase, 19.

A second daughter, Katy, 17, was seriously injured in the crash and taken to Wyoming Medical Center in Casper. She is conscious and doing well, said Parr's niece, Kathryn McAllister.

Family members have told the teen about the deaths, but they haven't determined where she will stay during her recovery, McAllister said.

However, it is likely that she will recover in Boise, Idaho, with relatives. The family was headed for a holiday gathering in Boise at the time of the crash.

Katy is now expected to be out of intensive care soon and family friends say it is possible she will be released from the hospital by the end of the week.

Funeral arrangements, including what kind of service and when it would be held, still haven't been decided.

"A lot of it hinges on Katy's health. I expect it to be a memorial service. They fondly referred to their wedding in 1986 as a 'Happening,' so the service will likely be of similar spirit," McAllister said in an e-mail.

Motorists Angela Seeley, Robert Maxwell and William Bowers received tickets for driving too fast for the road conditions on Saturday.

None could be reached for comment on Monday.

Parr was driving through blowing snow that sharply reduced visibility and created ground-blizzard conditions, according to the patrol.

His loss of control triggered the chain of crashes that led to his death, said Patrol Sgt. Stephen Townsend.

"He is the first to lose control, and everybody was unable to avoid him or other vehicles. We constantly remind people when they encounter those kinds of driving conditions to drive within their limits, reduce their speed and increase following distance. If need be, get completely off the highway and into the nearest town," Townsend said Monday.

Parr's 1997 Subaru slid sideways on westbound I-80 at about 9:50 a.m. Saturday. Seeley, of Colorado Springs, who was following in a 2003 Acura, swerved but clipped the front end of Parr's car. She then ran into the back of a snowplow.

Maxwell, of Douglas, Wyo., who was at the wheel of a Chevrolet pickup truck, swerved and missed Parr but ran into Seeley's car.

Bowers, of Bremerton, Wash, who was driving a United Van Lines tractor trailer, then struck Parr's car on the driver's side.

Parr and Widener were both wearing seat belts, according to the accident report. The two girls were not.

After the crash, I-80 in both directions was closed between Rawlins and Laramie and reopened around 2:30 p.m.

The accident is still under investigation.


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