California News

Teenage traffic deaths on the rise in Maryland

Nov 21, 2007 12:00 AM (283 days ago) by Courtney Mabeus, The Examiner
This story ranks Not ranked
Related Topics: ROCKVILLE, Md.

ROCKVILLE, Md. (Map, News) - Two Rockville high schoolers are the most recent casualties in a surge in traffic deaths that now claims nine teenagers killed in local Maryland counties this month.

Oswaldo Rosales, of Sandy Spring, and Ricardo Orellana, both 16 and both students at Richard Montgomery High School, died Tuesday when the 1997 Nissan Altima they were riding in hit into a tree. Police say the driver of the vehicle, Jose Miguel Gomez, lost control while driving south in the 14800 block of Avery Road in Rockville around 4 p.m. Monday.

Rosales, who was riding in the front passenger seat of the vehicle, died at the scene. Orellana died Tuesday after having been taken to a shock trauma center in Baltimore, officials said. He was riding in the back seat of the vehicle.

Gomez, a 19-year-old Richard Montgomery student from Rockville, was the only one wearing a seatbelt, police said. He remained in a hospital with non-life threatening injuries Tuesday. He had a valid license, police said.

This story continues below
Advertisement

The mood at Richard Montgomery was somber Tuesday. Grief-stricken students lined hallways and a vigil was held in the evening in honor of both teenagers. Rosales and Orellana were remembered as good-natured, friendly students who shared an interest in soccer.

“He was just so sweet,” Jessica Ranos, 17, said of her friend, Orellana.

She said she became friends with him when the two worked at a Dunkin’ Donuts together, where they became friends.

Rosales was an honors student who liked math and enjoyed fishing in the Chesapeake Bay with his father, Humberto, a friend who was speaking on behalf of his family at their Sandy Spring home said Tuesday.

His family, which also includes his mother, Angelica, and two younger sisters, moved to the country from El Salvador 11 years ago.

“They’re devastated,” the friend said.

And this is just the latest episode in a string of incidents that has baffled police and troubled educators.

On Nov. 12, a 17-year-old Springbrook High School junior was killed when the 15-year-old driver of the car he was riding in went out of control on a slick road and slammed into a tree. None of the vehicle's four occupants were licensed.

Earlier this month, four La Plata basketball players were killed on their way home from practice Nov. 6. A day earlier, two Calvert County teenagers were killed in a crash.

“Students do have a sense of invulnerability and it’s a horrifically sad thing that this has happened,” Kate Harrison, spokeswoman for Montgomery County Schools, said.

cmabeus@dcexaminer.com

Add a Comment


Name: (required)
Comments:
characters left
Comments are regulated by the Terms of Use.

Comments from Examiner Readers

10:08 AM MST on Sat., May. 10, 2008 re: "State starts campaign to help reduce traffic fatalities"

Examiner Reader said:
I am the mother of Monique Glover, I thought the article was an excellent one. These stories need to be told, a crash involving loved ones changes your life for life it's never the same. I am so very very proud of Monique, I know it is not easy for her to re-live that day. She is a strong individual with the will to help others, to help prevent others from having to experience what was the most horrific day of her life, loosing a child. This article put reality to deatils of crashes that people often hear about, it's always someone else it doesn't register until it's personal, well it happen to us. Adrienne Duncan

1 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree

Advertisement