A driver near Forest Lake hit a deer and abandoned her disabled pickup truck in the middle of a busy freeway where a semitrailer truck struck the pickup from behind, setting off a fiery chain-reaction crash.
The wreck and its immediate aftermath occurred about 8 a.m. Wednesday on northbound Interstate 35 at County Road 2.
Despite onlookers who were on foot nearby and other vehicles rolling past at the moment the big rig rammed the pickup, there were no reported injuries, Patrol Lt. Gordon Shank said Wednesday night.
Shank acknowledged that "each individual situation is going to determine the best course of action" after a vehicle becomes immobile in traffic.
But generally, he continued, "We do recommend that the involved party call 911 immediately and stay buckled up in the vehicle. We do not recommend people move around outside of their vehicle, as traffic is moving around the disabled vehicle at freeway speeds."
Shank declined to address why the semi driver hit the pickup after so many other vehicles avoided a collision, but added, "This is why we recommend that drivers practice good driving behaviors, such as putting distractions away and driving the speed limit. There can be vehicles, animals or debris in the roadway that can cause a traffic hazard."
Shank identified the pickup driver as Susan M. Norberg, 42, of Ramsey, and the trucker as David A. Haag, 59, of Center City, Minn.
"I could hear the cars whooshing past us," Norberg told the Star Tribune about 17 hours after running for her life to reach the freeway's shoulder. "I'm thinking, 'We're going to get hit here.' I just wanted to get out of the truck because I was terrified."