Five teenagers who died when a ute smashed into a tree in south-west Sydney have been named and pictured, as distraught relatives leave heartfelt tributes.
Antonio Desisto, Tyrese Bechard, Summer Williams, Lily Van De Putte and Gabby McLennan – all age between 14 and 16 – died just after 8pm on Tuesday when a Nissan Navara ute veered off the road in Buxton, 100km southwest of the city.
The driver, 18-year-old Tyrell Edwards, was taken to Liverpool Hospital with non life-threatening injuries.
He was arrested for mandatory blood and urine testing but is not in police custody.
It comes as the father of Miss Van de Putte, John, told the ABC he ‘doesn’t hold any grudges’ against the driver because ‘he is going to go through hell’.
Lily Van De Putte (pictured) sadly died with her friends in a ute smash on Tuesday night
Gabriella McLennan (pictured) was one of the teenage victims from the horror smash on Tuesday
Antonio Desisto (pictured) died in a car accident at about 8pm on Tuesday
Police said three girls, two aged 14 and a 15-year-old, and two boys, aged 15 and 16, were found in the wreckage.
Detective Acting Inspector Jason Hogan said preliminary investigations suggested speed was a possible factor in the crash.
‘We appeal to people to carry out their driving in accordance to the rules and regulations,’ the inspector said.
‘Obviously, having six people in a four-seater vehicle is inherently dangerous and it should not be done.’
The horror crash has sent shockwaves through the tight-knit town of Buxton as devastated locals attempt to make sense of the tragedy.
A close friend of the crashed Nissan driver Tyrrell Edward, Jamarley Frail, said it wasn’t clear whose car the 18-year-old pub worker was driving.
‘I’ve never seen him in a Nissan. I don’t know whose car that is,’ said Jamarley, who is also 18 and was in the same year at Picton High School as Tyrrell.
‘I know a lot of the victims in the accident,’ he said.
Pictured: Summer Williams, who was only 14 when she died on Tuesday night in a car accident
Pictured: Tyrese Bechard, who died with his friends in a car crash on Tuesday night
Tyrell Edwards, 18, (pictured) had been behind the wheel of the Nissan Navara ute when it veered off the road and slammed into a tree in southwest Sydney on Tuesday night
Just after 10.30am a flurry of mourners arrived with flowers to add to the growing mass of cellophane and blooms at the base of the rash tree.
One teenage girl sobbed openly as she placed her bunch of flowers on top of the other bouquets.
Meanwhile, a woman and man tightly embraced for several minutes in a bush clearing across the road from the crash site.
Two teenage girls with yellow chrysanthemums and two boys with white flowers laid their tributes and were comforted by two adult women.
One mother at the scene was too distraught to speak about the tragedy at length, saying: ‘I’m sorry. So sad. Too young.’
A handwritten tribute to one of the dead teenagers said they were ‘gone too soon’ and had brought ‘so much kindness to this world’.
A weeping teenage boy visited the site with a girl and adult woman who hugged him as they stood quietly observing the tragic scene.
An old set of car keys for a Subaru have been placed inside one of dozens of bouquets of flowers left for the five young victims.
Year 9 classmate Elly Mount tearfully remembered the five teenagers who died and revealed how she almost went joined them on the fateful trip.
Paramedics were pictured wheeling the male driver towards an ambulance that took the 18-year-old to Liverpool Hospital for mandatory blood and urine testing (pictured)
Four schoolgirls laid bunches of flowers at the base of a tree at the crash site on Wednesday
The horror crash has sent shockwaves through the tight-knit town of Buxton as devastated locals attempt to make sense of the tragedy (pictured, young mourners at the scene)
A woman and man tightly embraced for several minutes in a bush clearing across the road
A weeping teenage boy visited the site with a girl and adult woman who hugged him as they stood quietly observing the tragic scene
Bunches of flowers have been left by mourners, many Picton High students, at the crash scene
‘They wanted me to hang out with them,’ Elly said after laying flowers at the crash site with her mother, Amy Cook.
Tears streaming down her face, Elly said she had been closest to two of the sisters, who were top school soccer players.
‘(One of my friends) was an amazing goalie. (Her) mum did everything for me, drove me to games.
‘I don’t feel like it’s real. I am not coping.
‘Who’s going to get up and get their trophies for soccer, their parents?’
Elly said the whole group she had almost gone out driving with, including the two boys, were in Year 9 or 10.
At mid-morning, a flurry of groups of mourners arrived to pay their respects and leave tributes
A handwritten tribute to one of the dead teenagers said they were ‘gone too soon’ and had brought ‘so much kindness to this world’ (pictured, mourners visit the scene)
Friends of those involved in a fatal car accident pulled each other into a tight hug at the scene
Blayze Cox, one of the victim’s best friends, (left) said she still trying to process the loss while her distressed mother (right) struggled to find the words to express her grief
Five teenagers have been killed in a horror crash around 100km southwest of Sydney
Blayze Cox, a young girl who woke up without her ‘best friend’ on Wednesday morning, fought back tears at the scene.
‘I’m feeling a bit shocked and still finding it hard to believe it. She was my best friend and like an older sister to me,’ she told the Today Show.
‘I didn’t know it would happen so quickly.’
Her mother was similarly distressed and at one point put her head in her hands.
‘I feel sorry for the family and I’m obviously worried about my girls. They’re so upset about the whole thing and so am I, it’s so awful,’ she said.
Blayze told Daily Mail Australia her friend was a ‘very energetic and kind hearted girl’.
‘She was 14 and loved to go to the beach, listen to country music and most of all she loved her friends and family dearly,’ she said.
‘I will remember her by her smile and her beautiful laugh.’
Camden Police Superintendent Paul Fuller said families of the victims rushed to the scene after hearing about the crash on social media (pictured, East Parade, Buxton)
Not all of the teenagers had been formally identified as of Wednesday morning, as mourners arrive at the scene of the crash to pay their respects
A handwritten tribute to one of the dead teenagers said they were ‘gone too soon’ and had brought ‘so much kindness to this world’
The Nissan Navara veered off the road and slammed into a tree on East Parade, Buxton, a town of around 1000, near Picton, 100km southwest of Sydney
Camden Police Superintendent Paul Fuller said families of the victims rushed to the scene after hearing about the crash on social media – and that alcohol was not believed to be a factor.
He said not all of the teenagers had been formally identified as of Wednesday morning, and officers were working with the families.
‘It’s a horrific accident scene and a tragedy of this magnitude is going to have ripple effects… for their families, friends and through the local community,’ he said.
‘I’ve been in the police for 38 years and it’s one of the worst accident scenes I’ve ever come across.’
On Wednesday, Picton High School released a statement saying: ‘Our hearts go out to the family and friends of students involved in yesterday’s tragic accident.
Picton High students will be offered ongoing counselling as the Buxton community mourns
‘At Picton High we are prioritising support for our students as they come to terms with this terrible news. Extra counselling support and alternative arrangements will be in place to help our students through this.’
At the school, teenagers hugged and a girl was led crying from the campus.
Students were hurried into the campus where the NSW Department of Education is putting on additional counselling services.
Counselling will also be extended to first responders who attended the horror scene, some of whom would have recognised the victims.
A Buxton local, Stuart, who lives 12 doors down from the crash site said he heard a vehicle go past but would not say whether or not he thought it was speeding (pictured, the scene)
A Buxton local, Stuart, who lives 12 doors down from the crash site said he heard a vehicle go past but would not say whether or not he thought it was speeding.
‘The road is quite narrow, there’s no street lights and the trees are half a metre off the road,’ he told Radio 2GB.
A man who lives near to the crash scene said he heard sirens shortly after the incident and saw a helicopter land in a nearby field.
‘We heard the emergency services vehicles responding really quickly and saw the lights flashing, it lit up the whole street,’ Justin Davis told The Daily Telegraph.
Mr Davis said the area is normally very quite.
‘Even when kids ride their motorbikes along the streets they do it quietly,’ he said.
Police officers and emergency service workers are pictured at the crash scene on Tuesday
The Nissan Navara was seen crumpled against a tree from the impact of the horror smash
Mayor of Wollondilly Shire Matt Gould said his ‘entire shire is waking up in shock and mourning’ on Wednesday.
‘I don’t even have the words for how horrible this is,’ he said.
‘How do you even begin to process a loss like this? This is one of the most tragic accidents we have had in many many years.
‘We are a very close knit community. Our hearts go out to all the family and friends in the small village of Buxton.’
Local MP Nathaniel Smith said he had spoken with Picton High School’s school captain and that she had been ‘upset’.
He said the school community was taking the news ‘pretty hard’.
Police said families of the victims rushed to the scene after hearing about the crash on social media (pictured, a woman leaves a bunch of flowers at the scene)
Just after 10.30am a flurry of groups of mourners arrived with flowers to add to the growing mass of cellophane and blooms at the base of the rash tree
Mayor of Wollondilly Shire Matt Gould said his ‘entire shire is waking up in shock and mourning’ on Wednesday
Superintendent Adam Druber told the Today Show that despite the best efforts of emergency crews ‘there wasn’t much anyone could do’ for the victims.
‘A complication around these types of incidents, especially in these communities, is a lot of the emergency service workers possibly know the victims, which adds that extra complexity to what we do in the community,’ he said.
In an official statement on Tuesday night NSW Police said: ‘Three female and two male passengers all believed to be of similar age, died at the scene.’
Fire and Rescue NSW said numerous emergency crews attended ‘at a serious crash on East Parade involving numerous casualties’.
A medical team that arrived by helicopter also attended.
In an official statement on Tuesday night, NSW Police said: ‘Three female and two male passengers all believed to be of similar age, died at the scene.’
Superintendent Adam Druber said despite the best efforts of emergency crews ‘there wasn’t much anyone could do’ for the victims (pictured, schoolgirls leave flowers at the scene)
Officers from Camden Police Area Command established a crime scene, which is being examined by specialist police from the Crash Investigation Unit.
‘An investigation into the circumstances surrounding the crash is under way (and) a report will be prepared for the Coroner,’ a police spokesman said.
Police are appealing for anyone with dashcam footage or information about this incident to contact them, or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
Two distraught people are pictured at the scene of a crash on Tuesday night
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