Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Samantha Butler Injured in a Crash on January 31, 2022 in Johnson County, Kansas

Samantha R Butler of Harrisonville, Missouri was injured on Monday, January 31, 2022 at 07:35 AM in Johnson County, Kansas. Butler is a 20-year-old woman.

The crash happened here: Interstate 35 northbound at milepost 221.3 or 0.3 miles south of College Boulevard in Lenexa, Ks.

In the crash, Butler was a driver. The police described the crash like this:

All vehicles were northbound on I-35. Vehicle 2 [the 2016 Honda CR-V driven by Mark Pope] slowed for traffic ahead. Vehicle 1 [the 2008 Ford Edge driven by Samantha Butler] rear ended vehicle 2[the 2016 Honda CR-V driven by Mark Pope], vehicle 2[the 2016 Honda CR-V driven by Mark Pope] side-swiped vehicle 3[the 2016 Ford F-150 Truck driven by Daniel Wagner] and vehicle 1[the 2008 Ford Edge driven by Samantha Butler] rear-ended vehicle 4[the 1997 Ford Econoline Van driven by Omar Quintana-Nunez].

Injuries

Butler's injuries were minor. Butler was taken by ambulance to Overland Park Regional.

Vehicle Damage

The police said the 2008 Ford Edge with Kansas license plate number 984MCP damage was unknown. This vehicle was insured. Progressive insured this vehicle. This vehicle was removed by Overland Tow Service.

How To Get the Highway Patrol Report

The Kansas Highway Patrol trooper with badge number K375 of the Kansas Highway Patrol wrote up the report. The highway patrol assigned report number 2022-001149 to this crash. The KSHP charges $5.00 for each copy of the report plus additional fees of $2.00 for each witness statement. But you can call 877-925-1969 to request a free copy of the report. In order to get the report through the KSHP website, you must create a Kansas.gov account and give them your credit card. You must agree to be subject to Kansas Statute 45-230: Unlawful Use of Names Derived from Public Records. This statute imposes on those subject to it "a civil penalty in an action brought by the attorney general or county or district attorney" of up to "$500 for each violation." Further, unless you qualify under the Federal Driver's Privacy Protection Act, the report you get will have important and necessary information such as photographs, social security numbers, driver license numbers, names, addresses and telephone numbers redacted (blacked out).

The information in this article came from the Kansas Highway Patrol website.

No comments:

Post a Comment