Visitation Today For 12 Year Old Killed in Massive Crash

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Updated: 1/24 12:13 pm
People are invited to pay their respects to the family of a young girl killed as a result of a massive crash on a local interstate. Visitation Services are today for 12 year old Sammy Reagan.

The service is at Rivers Crossing Community Church in Mason. It runs from 4:30 to 7:30 this evening.

Reagan died as part of the enormous crash on I-275 earlier this week.  More than 80 cars and trucks piled up during a sudden snow shower on Monday.R Reagan was the only fatality in the chaos.

A celebration service is tomorrow afternoon at Hope Church in Mason starting at 3:30 p.m.

Meanwhile, first responders drove up to the chaotic scene on I-275 in Colerain Township on Monday spoke to Local 12's Angenette Levy spoke about the massive challenge of helping the injured.

Colerain Township firefighters train for the worst. But Monday's 86 vehicle pileup was unlike anything they'd seen. Mike Cramerding: "I saw a lot of trucks going sideways and I thought, hmm. It got bigger, as we got closer."

Paramedic Cramerding was on the first ambulance to arrive. The first victim he found: 12- year-old Sammy Reagan.  "There was a crowd kind of around Sammy and they were waving us in and like I said we started working on her immediately."

As Cramerding's ambulance took Reagan to the hospital ... he stayed. Countless people asked him for help.   "Right when we got her in the back of the squad, I started to the see the gravity of the situation and we started dispatching at that point three additional engines, five additional life squads."

Chuck Palm: "When I heard that I knew we were going to have something that was beyond what he was going to be able to control with the resources on the scene." Battalion Chief Chuck Palm arrived minutes later and took over. He ordered extra help from several other fire departments.  "We set up three separate extrication crews to move in, open doors, extricate victims and get them out."

The firefighters worked for hours in the cold - they were just glad to help when people needed it most.   "I think it went really smoothly, I think we did a great job, we transported people quickly."


"It's a large incident for Colerain. It's something we've never dealt with. It will be a good learning experience." i
A young girl killed in a massive interstate pileup is remembered as bright and vibrant. Sammy Reagan was killed on Interstate 275 on Monday, when a cable barrier hit her, ultimately causing her death.

86 cars were involved in that pileup in Colerain Township yesterday. 12-year-old Reagan was a sixth grader at Columbia Intermediate school - she was involved in dance and soccer.

Local 12 News Reporter Angenette Levy was at the Wall-To-Wall Soccer Complex in Mason.

Reagan and her twin brother played for the Warren County United Soccer Club. Sammy had been bumped up to a more competitive team... she sometimes practiced at Wall to Wall Soccer. Her teammates and coaches say she was the ultimate team, player and a cheerleader for her team - but they also say she was a joy to be around.

As some of Reagan's fellow soccer players practiced at Wall to Wall soccer. Her coaches and teammates at Warren County United Soccer are sharing their memories.  Carla Light is Sammy's former coach. "She just cheered everybody on. She had a good attitude about learning.  She wanted to learn and to grow."

Another coach, Rob Hoover, says "She always had a smile. I mean even when she made a mistake she would look at me with a big smile and keep going out there."

Hoover coached Sammy last season. She played mid- field ... and while she was on the shorter side, that didn't stop her from taking on bigger players.

Brian Eatman is Sammy's former coach and says, "Every time that she was on the field she full of spirit and she played hard every time she was out there."

Players and coaches were heartbroken when they found out Sammy had been killed after a cable median barrier hit her during the pileup on I-275. As a tribute to the spunky 12- year-old with the big personality... neighbors hung orange ribbons on their mailboxes and Reilly Hoover, who played with Sammy, wore an orange shirt - marked with a message. Orange was Sammy's favorite color.  "She was just really loud and fun.  I mean she was never quiet at all. She was just a ball of energy."

Sammy's habit of sticking out her tongue when she dribbled earned her a nickname from her trainer. Steve Hauter was Sammy's trainer. "I called her tongue girl and she actually got mad if I called her by her real name. She'd say "I'm tongue girl" and I'd say ok, I'm sorry!"

From listening to Sammy's teammates and coaches, it's clear they just lost a soccer player. They also lost a friend. Troy Callahan says, "Sammy was just a great girl. After every practice she would come up and thank us for giving our time to soccer practice and stuff."

Sammy Reagan wore #79. The soccer club is looking into having her number stitched on the team's jerseys and planting a tree for her at McClure Field.

The visitation for Sammy will be held Thursday at Rivers Crossing Community Church in ,Mason from 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. A celebration service will be held the next day, but details have not been finalized. 
Sammy Reagan died after an 86 car pileup on I-275 in Colerain Township on January 21, 2013. (Photo provided by Kings Local School District, WKRC-TV)
Sammy Reagan died after an 86 car pileup on I-275 in Colerain Township on January 21, 2013. (Photo provided by Kings Local School District, WKRC-TV)
The Butler County Coroner say a Kings Local Schools student killed in the aftermath of an 86 car pileup on I-275 in Colerain Township on Monday, died of a head injury.  The official cause of death for 12 year old Sammy Reagan is "accidental head injury", according to the report by coroner Lisa Mannix.

"Sammy Reagan was a happy, vivacious 12-year old who always had a smile on her face," said school officials in a release sent to media outlets on Tuesday.

A burst of snow is being blamed for the chain reaction crash on the westbound side of the highway, around 11:30 a.m. Monday.

The 911 call center says they received more than 100 calls on the deadly accident. Local 12 obtained the audio from some of those calls.  Callers try to count the number of vehicles involved and lose track. One woman says she is inside the car with her baby, and is scared that she'll be struck again. And a man tells dispatchers that he is still seeing cars running into the guardrail.

Officials say that guardrail is what likely killed Reagan, who apparently got out of her vehicle and was standing in the median when the cable barrier was struck by another vehicle, snapped, and hit her.

Official with King Local Schools say Sammy was a sixth grader at Columbia Elementary and has a twin brother and a younger brother. Counselors and psychologists are on hand at the school to help students and staff members. Safe rooms were set up for students to have a quiet place to talk and mourn.

In an early morning announcement Principal Shelley Detmer-Bogaert told students about Sammy’s death. “I know this news makes all of us very sad and that is okay. Sammy was a wonderful young lady and we will miss her.” She asked students to take good care of each other and to “be kinder than is necessary.”

Sammy loved to play soccer and ski. While a student at South Lebanon Elementary she was student council president.

“Sammy just brought sunshine everywhere she went,” teacher Mike Luke said. “She was a rare student.”

Another one of Sammy’s teachers, Jessica Collett, described Sammy as “a bright light in the classroom. She loved learning and persevered at everything.”

Everyone who talked about Sammy said how happy she was. “She was friendly with everyone,” Mrs. Collett said. “She was just so bubbly and bouncy all the time.”

Arrangements for Sammy’s funeral are pending.

The westbound lanes of I-275 reopened around 6:30 p.m. Monday. Deputies are describing this as a rare, almost freak incident - that could have been much worse.

Anne Goertzen described what happened. "All of the sudden it was just a whiteout. And just like that it seemed like it was slick, he slid."

The Goertzens were driving back to Kansas from Pennsylvania when they drove into a cloud of white mixed with brake lights. Jake Goertzen recalls, "All of the sudden the traffic was up in front of us and we had no where to go. I remember going back and forth a couple of times and pretty soon it stopped and the vehicles kept piling on to us. The semi jackknifed in back of us - good thing. That spared us a lot from getting hit more."

Keith Daniels hit the wall of white in his tractor trailer.   "There was nothing i could do but I just stopped and let off the brakes and the gas and said ok. Keep it straight."

Daniels and the Goertzens weren't hurt - but 20 others were taken to area hospitals.  The Goertzens described the scene as chaotic. "It looked awful. Some of the cars were driven on top of cars."

But the Goertzens say they're grateful - things didn't end badly for their family. "We just feel like it was the Lord protecting us even though everything was totaled. We just feel like it was the Lord's protecting hand that all of our lives were spared."

Local 12' Angenette Levy spoke with two deputies on Monday night- combined they have more than 60 years of service with the sheriff's office. Both said they've never seen anything like this, with more than 80 vehicles involved in one crash.

The Hamilton County sheriff's office says it could take days to piece this investigation together. Deputies are asking any witnesses to contact the sheriff's office at 825-1500. 

This crash happened at about the same time as another pileup on I-75 south near Middletown. For more on that wreck, click here.
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