SAN DIEGO (CNS) - A 71-year-old man was behind bars Tuesday on suspicion of being intoxicated when the car he was driving jumped a curb on an East Village thoroughfare and plowed into a makeshift encampment, killing three homeless men and injuring six other transients.
Craig Martin Voss of San Diego was arrested Monday morning at the scene of the crash in the 1500 block of B Street, just east of Park Boulevard.
Voss was driving a westbound Volvo station wagon that veered to the right off the roadway shortly after 9 a.m. and struck the group of homeless people, who were on a wide sidewalk amid tents and collections of personal items, San Diego Police Department Chief David Nisleit said.
The fatally injured men, ages 40, 61 and 65, died at the site of the crash, Nisleit said. Their identities have been withheld pending family notification.
Paramedics took five other victims to hospitals for treatment of injuries varying from severe to moderately serious, and treated another homeless person at the scene for minor trauma. Their names, ages and genders were not released.
Two of the victims were admitted to UCSD Medical Center in critical condition, but were awake and responsive as of Monday afternoon, Nisleit told reporters.
"I don't know if people were sleeping, if people were sitting there (at the time of the crash)," the police chief said during a late-morning briefing Monday.
After the station wagon crashed onto the sidewalk, then veered back onto the street and skidded to a halt in a traffic lane, Voss got out and tried to provide aid to the victims prior to the arrival of emergency crews, Nisleit said.
Following questioning by officers, the San Diego resident was arrested and booked into county jail on suspicion of vehicular manslaughter, causing great bodily injury during the commission of a felony and DUI. He being held on $1 million bail pending arraignment, scheduled for next Tuesday.
Voss was believed to have been under the influence of a drug of some kind when he lost control of his car, according to Nisleit, who declined to specify what type of substance he was suspected of having ingested.
Just prior to the wreck, police got a call from a person reporting a possibly intoxicated motorist in the area, driving a vehicle matching the description of the suspect's, according to Nisleit. Investigators believe it was the same one that crashed onto the crowded sidewalk minutes later, the chief said.
All those struck by the vehicle were homeless, according to San Diego City Council President Pro Tem Stephen Whitburn.
"As we have learned that all nine victims are a part of our unsheltered community, this is stark evidence of the need to find permanent solutions to the homelessness crisis so that no San Diegans are forced to seek shelter in unsafe places, such as under bridges and in tunnels that vehicles pass through," Whitburn said in a prepared statement Monday.
The stretch of roadside where the crash occurred -- in a long underpass beneath San Diego City College -- is commonly occupied by squatters seeking shelter from the sun or inclement weather, such as the scattered rain that fell in the city Monday, Mayor Todd Gloria said.
"Let me state it very clearly -- a street is not a home," Gloria told reporters. "It's not humane or safe to keep allowing our unsheltered neighbors to sleep under bridges, in alleys or in canyons. We must take decisive action to provide more compassionate solutions for people experiencing homelessness. ... As mayor, I've been clear -- we will not turn a blind eye to homelessness. We will deal with it head-on."