Truck drags sedan sideways down a Chicago highway while desperate driver waves frantically for help
Terrified female driver, 19, desperately signals for help as her car is dragged down Chicago highway by oblivious truck driver after it got trapped when she changed lanes
Laylisha Gardner, 19, was seen waving as her car was dragged beneath a truckA fellow motorist recorded the dramatic scene on Tuesday on the Interstate 294Eventually the truck driver managed to stop, and no injures have been reported
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This is the astonishing moment a teenage driver desperately waved for help out of her window as a semi-truck dragged her car sideways along a Chicago highway.
Footage recorded on Tuesday at around 11:40 a.m. by a motorist travelling on Interstate 294 northbound, in Cook County near milepost 30.25, shows clouds of dust rising from beneath the truck as it travelled along the road, pulling a 2005 black Honda Accord with it.
Illinois State Police later said the car, driven by 19-year-old Laylisha Gardner, was trying to change lanes when it somehow became wedged beneath the truck.
Incredibly, nobody was injured in the dramatic road smash. The truck driver, 52-year-old Mohamed Yousif, eventually pulled over having apparently earlier been oblivious to Gardner’s ordeal.
The video shows how the front of the car was flattened and the windscreen smashed with the young driver somehow having avoided being crushed in the collision.
The truck continues to plow down the road despite the sound of tires screeching along the highway.
A cloud of dust could be seen rising from beneath the truck as it travelled along the road, with the black Honda visibly wedged beneath it, being dragged along the road
The black Honda was visibly wedged beneath the semi-truck, which was dragging it along the road just outside Chicago
Gardner can clearly be seen waving frantically from the front seat to try and get the attention of other motorists so that they could alert the truck’s driver.
Illinois State Police later said the black Honda was trying to change lanes when it became stuck beneath the semi-truck.
They also confirmed that the truck’s driver eventually stopped so that the Honda could be freed.
It is not yet clear how far the truck continued to drive before pulling over.
The truck’s driver, Mohamed Yousif eventually stopped so that the Honda could be freed, and it is believed that nobody was injured in the incident
With the car trapped beneath the semi-truck, driver Laylisha can be seen waving desperately from the front of the sedan to seek help from other motorists
Incredibly, nobody was injured in the incident, and police did not provide any details regarding possible charges.
Two lanes on the Tri-State Tollway were closed for about 15 minutes while police investigated the incident.
The shocking footage was filmed by motorist Grzesiek Misiek, who said he managed to get the attention of the truck driver and got him to pull over.
Sharing the footage to Facebook on Tuesday, Grzesiek said: ‘Pulled him over on i294. I was like w** happened here…. then I saw the car and that person still inside.’
People were quick to voice opinions on the incident, with some asking why other motorists didn’t do more to help, while some questioned how the truck driver wasn’t aware of the situation
People were quick to comment on the video, with one person, who claims to drive trucks for a living, saying: ‘This driver should have noticed the vehicle or at least the loss of power from the rig. Blind spots are called blind sports for a reason.
‘People should be flagging the driver and pointing to the problem if they are not aware. Just when you think you’ve seen it all there is always something out there to top it!’
Another person commented under the video: ‘Bro, why is no one honking?’
And a third said: ‘I’m guessing he skipped over that part about checking your mirrors every 7-10 seconds.’
Despite no injuries being sustained in the incident, the National Safety Council has previously said that 5,005 large trucks were involved in fatal crashes in 2019.
This figure accounts for around 10 percent of all vehicles involved in fatal accidents.
The organization defines a large truck as any medium or heavy truck that weights more than 10,000 pounds, but doesn’t include buses or motor homes.