logo
1 flown to hospital after tractor-trailer goes down embankment in Montgomery County

1 flown to hospital after tractor-trailer goes down embankment in Montgomery County

Yahoo08-06-2025
MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Tenn. (WKRN) — Montgomery County motorists may need to seek an alternate route Saturday evening while crews clear the scene of a tractor-trailer crash that left at least one person injured.
According to the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office's Facebook post from 6:31 p.m. on Saturday, June 7, Dixie Bee Road will be shut down for 'approximately the next couple of hours' due to cleanup efforts.
1 dead after pedestrian crash in Lewisburg, police say
Authorities said a semi went off Interstate 24 and down the embankment onto Dixie Bee Road around 4:30 p.m. No other vehicles were involved in the incident.
The sheriff's office said one person was being flown to an area hospital while another was being removed from the vehicle, but no major injuries were reported on her.
After Montgomery County Fire Service requested assistance at mile marker 15 on I-24 West for an overturned tractor-trailer 'requiring heavy extrication,' Clarksville Fire Rescue announced at 7:22 p.m. that crews had successfully removed the second passenger from the cab of the vehicle. Fire officials added that 'the patient' was in stable condition and en route to Vanderbilt University Medical Center via LifeFlight, but they didn't specify whether that was the first passenger or the second passenger.
READ MORE | Latest headlines from Clarksville and Montgomery County
No additional details have been released about the crash, which is under investigation by Tennessee Highway Patrol.
📲 Download the News 2 app to stay updated on the go.📧 Sign up for WKRN email alerts to have breaking news sent to your inbox.💻 for Nashville, TN and all of Middle Tennessee.
This is a developing story. WKRN News 2 will continue to update this article as new information becomes available.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

House Subpoenas Maxwell as WSJ Reports Trump in Epstein Files
House Subpoenas Maxwell as WSJ Reports Trump in Epstein Files

Bloomberg

time4 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

House Subpoenas Maxwell as WSJ Reports Trump in Epstein Files

A Republican-led House committee subpoenaed convicted sex offender and Jeffrey Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell to testify before Congress next month just minutes before the Wall Street Journal reported that Justice Department officials informed President Donald Trump that his name appears in documents related to the case. The Oversight committee's deposition is set in the subpoena to occur on Aug. 11 at the Federal Correctional Institution Tallahassee, where Maxwell is being held.

Abrego Garcia to remain behind bars for at least a month even as judge rejects Trump administration's claim he's dangerous
Abrego Garcia to remain behind bars for at least a month even as judge rejects Trump administration's claim he's dangerous

CNN

time4 minutes ago

  • CNN

Abrego Garcia to remain behind bars for at least a month even as judge rejects Trump administration's claim he's dangerous

A federal judge in Tennessee declined on Wednesday to undo a separate judge's decision to let Kilmar Abrego Garcia remain free while he awaits trial on human smuggling charges — though he'll continue to remain behind bars for at least another month. The ruling from US District Judge Waverly Crenshaw said federal prosecutors had not shown 'through clear and convincing evidence' that Abrego Garcia would present a danger to others or the community if he were allowed to remain out of criminal custody as his case unfolds. 'The government's general statements about the crimes brought against Abrego, and the evidence it has in support of those crimes, do not prove Abrego's dangerousness,' Crenshaw wrote in a 37-page ruling rejecting a request from the Trump administration that he should reverse a ruling by a magistrate judge in Nashville that also said prosecutors hadn't made a strong case for keeping Abrego Garcia behind bars for now. But the magistrate judge — Barbara Holmes — said in another decision that Abrego Garcia would remain behind bars for at least 30 more days, granting an unopposed request by his lawyers for him to stay in criminal custody. Abrego Garcia's lawyers had made the request earlier this week in an effort to ensure removal proceedings wouldn't quickly begin once he's released from custody. Just as Crenshaw, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, released his ruling, a third judge in Maryland who is overseeing a civil case brought by Abrego Garcia and his family over his wrongful deportation earlier this year to El Salvador released her own ruling that bars the administration from quickly deporting him again should he be released from criminal custody in coming days. That ruling from US District Judge Paula Xinis, also an Obama appointee, is meant to do two things: Restore Abrego Garcia to the immigration position he was in before his deportation in mid-March and ensure his due process rights aren't violated again should officials try to remove him from the US a second time. 'These rulings are a powerful rebuke of the government's lawless conduct and a critical safeguard for Kilmar's due process rights,' said Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg, one of Abrego Garcia's attorneys, in a statement. 'After the government unlawfully deported him once without warning, this legal protection is essential.' Xinis is prohibiting the Trump administration from taking Abrego Garcia into US Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody once he's released from criminal custody, and she ordered officials to put him back into the position of being under supervision by the ICE Baltimore Field Office, which is what his status quo was prior to mid-March. That supervision allowed him to work and live in Maryland, with occasional check-ins with an immigration officer. 'Once Abrego Garcia is restored under the ICE Supervision Order out of the Baltimore Field Office, Defendants may take whatever action is available to them under the law,' the judge wrote, adding that it's possible he could be ordered to appear before immigration officials in Baltimore, who may begin the process of deporting him. 'So long as such actions are taken within the bounds of the Constitution and applicable statutes, this Court will have nothing further to say,' Xinis wrote. The Trump administration quickly criticized the judge's decision. 'The fact this unhinged judge is trying to tell ICE they can't arrest an MS-13 gang member, indicted by a grand jury for human trafficking, and subject to immigration arrest under federal law is LAWLESS AND INSANE,' Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said on X, referring to the government's allegation that Abrego Garcia is a gang member. The ruling also puts guardrails on the government's ability to quickly deport Abrego Garcia to a nation other than his home country of El Salvador. Those measures, the judge said, are meant to ensure the government won't run roughshod over Abrego Garcia's due process rights, which include having the chance to raise a claim that he has a fear of facing torture in the third country the government may want to deport him to. Should officials be planning to deport him to a third country, they must give his lawyers at least 72 hours' notice prior to that intended removal so he has an opportunity to make such 'claims of credible fear or seek any other relief available to him under the law and the Constitution.' The Maryland father of three was wrongly deported to El Salvador in mid-March, setting off a monthslong legal fracas before Xinis, who ordered the government to secure his return to the US. He was brought back to the US last month to face federal human smuggling charges in Tennessee. Abrego Garcia is currently in pre-trial detention in Tennessee but could soon be released from that court's authority and turned over to the Department of Homeland Security. Last month, his attorneys in the case before Xinis, of the federal court in Greenbelt, Maryland, raised concerns that the Trump administration would quickly deport him once he's out of criminal custody and back in the hands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The government has wavered in recent weeks on whether they would deport him before he stands trial in the human smuggling case.' 'All we're trying to do for today is ensure that there is no constitutional violation,' Andrew Rossman, one of Abrego Garcia's attorneys, said during a recent court hearing. The government is already barred from removing Abrego Garcia to El Salvador because of a 2019 order from an immigration judge.

Attorney General Told Trump His Name Appeared in Epstein Files
Attorney General Told Trump His Name Appeared in Epstein Files

New York Times

time4 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Attorney General Told Trump His Name Appeared in Epstein Files

Attorney General Pam Bondi informed President Trump in the spring that his name appeared in the Jeffrey Epstein files, according to people with knowledge of the exchange. The disclosure came as part of a broader briefing on the re-examination of the case by F.B.I. agents and prosecutors. It was made by Ms. Bondi during a meeting that also included the deputy attorney general, Todd Blanche, and covered a variety of topics. Ms. Bondi frequently meets with Mr. Trump to brief him on various matters, officials said. Ms. Bondi and Mr. Blanche informed the president that his name, as well as those of other high-profile figures, came up in their re-examination of documents connected to the case that had not previously been made public. Mr. Trump, a friend of the disgraced financier, has already appeared in documents related to the investigation. Appearing at the White House in February, Ms. Bondi distributed a series of binders about the Epstein files with the phone numbers of the president's former wife and his daughter in them. 'As part of our routine briefing, we made the president aware of the findings,' Ms. Bondi and Mr. Blanche wrote in a statement in response to questions about the briefing. 'Nothing in the files warranted further investigation or prosecution.' Steven Cheung, the White House communications director, would not address questions about the briefing, but called any suggestion that Mr. Trump was engaged in wrongdoing related to Mr. Epstein 'fake news' and said Mr. Trump ejected Mr. Epstein from his club, Mar-a-Lago, for 'being a creep.' Department officials have regularly informed some White House officials about developments in the inquiry. Such communications are permissible under the law. The conversation was reported earlier by The Wall St. Journal. One person close to Mr. Trump, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity, said that White House officials were not concerned about the latest disclosures given that Mr. Trump's name appeared in the first round of information that Ms. Bondi released.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store