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4 Men Killed When Car Plunges Down Embankment In Saugerties

SAUGERTIES, N.Y. (CBSNewYork/AP) -- A car carrying five young co-workers plunged down a 110-foot embankment in the Hudson Valley, hit a house and came to rest on its roof, killing four men inside, police said.

Meredith McSpirit, 19, of Kingston, failed to make a sharp turn Wednesday morning at an intersection in the village of Saugerties, sending the car down a private drive and over a heavily vegetated embankment. It hit a house across the street from the embankment and landed upside down, trapping McSpirit and her four passengers, according to police.

"It struck it with such force that it caused structural damage," police Chief Joseph Sinagra said Thursday.

No one was inside the home, but the impact fractured pipes and flooded the basement, he said.

Sinagra said it was too early in the investigation to determine whether the crash involved human error, criminality or mechanical problems. He could not say whether the car was traveling faster than the village's 30 mph speed limit.

Killed were Dante Crump, 22, Kaireem Meeks Jr., 24, and Jante Clark, 26, all of Kingston, and Adam McQueen, 22, of Ulster Park, police said. McSpirit was in stable condition Thursday at an Albany hospital with a spinal injury.

All five had just finished a shift at an equestrian show where they worked.

By Thursday afternoon, a GoFundMe crowdsourcing page set up to pay for the men's funerals had raised more than $7,500.

"Their parents have enough to deal with, let's all work together to make sure they don't have to worry about the cost of their babies funerals," the page reads.

Deborah Izzo, who taught Crump and McQueen in Kingston schools, pledged $100 for "my kids."

"They believed in themselves and they were grateful for everything everybody did for them," Izzo said. "I don't know how any of us are going to recover."

McQueen had told Izzo this summer he was going to Mount Saint Mary College in Newburgh, where he planned to play basketball and major in business and marketing.

"He's a salesman," she said. "I could see it."

Crump was mature and caring, Izzo said, recalling the time he helped her up when she tripped during a fire drill. He was to begin his senior year at Hartwick College.

"He was full of life and full of fun," said the Rev. Paul Messner of the Otsego County Lutheran Parish, who advises the fraternity where Crump was a social brother.

Hartwick head football coach Mark Carr said Crump was "a valued member of our squad the past three seasons, and beloved by his teammates and coaches."

A week before the crash, McSpirit was charged by state police with endangering the welfare of a child for allegedly leaving her 2-month-old daughter with her 17-year-old sister after the two got stoned on marijuana. That charge is still pending, according to state police in Kingston.

The victims' employer, HITS CEO Tom Struzzieri, told the Times Herald-Record of Middletown that all five were coming from a shift Wednesday. He said the four men worked in the VIP section of HITS, while McSpirit worked in food service.

(TM and © Copyright 2015 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2015 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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