Skip to main content

1 severely injured in high speed crash, fire on I-95 near Dale City

One person suffered burns following a multivehicle crash and fire on Interstate 95 Tuesday, which shut down southbound lanes between Dale City and Dumfries in Virginia for over four hours. According to Virginia State Police, a Honda sedan was “weaving in and out of traffic” at high speed. The crash happened before 2:30 p.m., and the interstate was closed from exit 156 (Dale Boulevard) to exit 152 (Dumfries Road). After making a sudden lane change, the sedan was run off the interstate, hit a guardrail, re-entered the travel lanes, and hit by a tractor-trailer. Both vehicles caught fire on impact. The Honda driver, 21, suffered life-threatening injuries and was flown to The Burn Center at Medstar in D.C., Virginia State Police spokeswoman Corinne Geller said in an email. The tractor-trailer’s driver was not injured in the crash, and the vehicle was empty. Police said possible charges are pending as the investigation is ongoing. Hundreds of people stuck between the diversion point at exit 156 and the crash — including at the rest stop — were led out of the way by police on one lane. By 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, the backups extended for more than 12 miles. It took a long time to clear the road because of the investigation and the damage. “You can’t just tow a tractor-trailer that is that badly burned,” WTOP Traffic reporter Dave Dildine said. “The recovery is complicated and time-consuming.” Interstate traffic flooded routes, such as Dale Boulevard, Minneville Road, Smoketown Road and Prince William Parkway, along with U.S. Route 1. Traffic was diverted onto Dale Boulevard, Dildine said, and to make matters worse there was a crash there, as well, for some time. Bailing out at Route 1 was “not an original idea,” Dildine said, as drivers flocked there in hopes of avoiding traffic. Northbound I-95 lanes remained open after the crash, but there were serious rubbernecking delays. Below are earlier scenes from the crash.


WTOP Traffic


WTOP’s José Umaña contributed to this report.

Completing the FAFSA: Everything you should know

Filling out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, which opens by Dec. 31, is one of the most important steps students and their families can take to pay for college. Some states now make completing the FAFSA a high school graduation requirement. The U.S. Department of Education awarded about $111.6 billion in federal grants, loans and work-study funds in fiscal year 2022, according to the most recent Federal Student Aid annual report. Those federal funds will assist roughly 9.8 million students in completing their education.
Read Next Story