5 deadly wrong-way crashes: Lives lost on local roadways

A 69-year-old Beavercreek man and an 18-year-old Miamisburg High School graduate are the latest to be killed in area wrong-way crashes.

»RELATED: Wrong-way I-675 crash kills Beavercreek man, Miamisburg grad

Retired Wright-Patterson Air Force Base analyst Melvin Bonie Jr. and Kalip Grimm of Miami Twp. died after their vehicles collided Monday night in a three-vehicle accident that closed down lanes on I-675 near the Ohio 48 interchange, authorities said.

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Prior to Monday night, four other recent collisions in the Miami Valley that demonstrate the lethality of wrong-way crashes include:

»RELATED: Driver in fiery, wrong-way I-75 crash had drugs in system

-Fiery downtown Dayton crash: The wrong-way driver in an April 30 fiery crash in Dayton, Andrew T. Brunsman, had alcohol and marijuana in his system at the time, according to the Montgomery County Coroner's Office. Brunsman, 30, of Beavercreek, plowed head-on into a semi hauling a tanker of gasoline. The collision and following explosions sent fireballs skyward and plumes of black smoke pouring over Dayton neighborhoods north of downtown. The tanker and its contents burned for more than an hour. Authorities shut down the entire highway. Pavement was damaged by the inferno at the accident site, causing delay to reopening some southbound lanes.

»RELATED: Lengthy investigation expected for wrong-way crash that killed 5

-Band members killed: In February of 2016, five people, including several local musicians, were killed in a wrong-way crash blamed on alcohol on Interstate 75. The dead included three members of a Dayton rock band CounterFlux and a 61-year-old man who had been arrested for OVI just 48 hours before the crash. The young victims included four friends: Kyle Canter, 23, of New Carlisle; Earl Miller II, 27, of New Carlisle; Vashti Nicole Brown, 29, of Dayton; and Devin Bachmann, 26, of Huber Heights. James Pohlabeln, a 61-year-old retiree from Dayton, was the driver of the other car. He had been released from jail just 33 hours earlier in connection with a separate suspected drunken driving crash.

»RELATED: Coroner: Driver drunk in crash that killed Fairfield couple

-Parents of four die: A Fairfield couple died April 8, 2016, when a wrong-way driver, who also died, struck their car on Interstate 75 in Evandale. Nazif Shteiwi, 61, and his wife, Halla Odeh Shteiwi, 55, were returning from a family function in Kentucky when hit by Kory Wilson, 30, of Springfield Twp. Wilson had a blood alcohol level 2.5 times the legal limit in Ohio, said Hamilton County Coroner's Office. Witnesses said Wilson was driving the correct way on I-75 seconds before the crash, then abruptly turned around. The Shteiwis, who immigrated from Jordan 40 years ago, had four children in college, the family said.-

»RELATED: I-70 crash: Wrong-way driver’s death a suicide

-Freeway suicide: On April 14, 2015, Chris Coleman passed through an emergency U-turn drive to the oncoming lanes of I-70 near the 48 mile marker in Clark County. He drove the wrong way on the shoulder before veering into the path of an oncoming tractor-trailer, according to witnesses. Coleman's Mazda exploded on impact and he died at the scene. The semi driver escaped without injury. After an investigation, the coroner ruled that Coleman committed suicide.

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