שוידערליכע באס קראך אויפן I-95: א כינעזער בירגער, וועלכער פארמאגט א ניו יארקער CDL לייסענס טראץ וואס ער קען נישט קיין ווארט ענגליש, פאראורזאכט א שרעקליכע טראגעדיע וואס האט אפגעקאסט דאס לעבן פון פינף מענטשן, אריינגערעכנט א זיבן יעריג קינד.
Outrageous Tragedy: Chinese Foreigner With NY CDL Who Couldn't Speak English Kills 7-Year-Old and Four Others in Horrific I-95 Bus Crash
A devastating bus crash on I-95 in Stafford County, Virginia has claimed five lives, including a 7-year-old child and a 13-year-old from the same family, after a commercial driver with a New York-issued CDL failed to slow down in a work zone. The driver, a naturalized U.S. citizen originally from China, reportedly could not speak English, raising serious questions about how he was granted a commercial license in the first place. Forty-four people were hospitalized following the violent collision, turning what should have been a routine trip into a scene of heartbreak and loss.
This incident highlights the dangerous consequences of lax standards in states like New York when issuing CDLs to individuals who may not meet basic safety and communication requirements. The driver had been operating the vehicle despite these clear limitations, directly contributing to the failure to navigate the highway work zone safely. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has publicly called the situation unacceptable, pointing to broader issues with state-level oversight of commercial licensing.
Under the Trump administration, there is renewed focus on prioritizing American safety and reforming systems that put citizens at risk. This tragedy serves as a stark reminder of why stronger federal standards, stricter English proficiency requirements, and thorough vetting for CDL applicants are essential. Families affected by this crash deserve justice, and policymakers must act to prevent similar preventable disasters caused by weak enforcement and poor screening.