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Richie Hardcore: Timaru car crash a wake up call for young men - Early Edition on Newstalk ZB

Early Edition on Newstalk ZB

Alcohol. Speed. An overloaded car. Unrestrained passengers.
It was a recipe for disaster - and now five Timaru teenagers are dead, their families and community reeling.
The five boys died at the scene after the car they were in crashed about 7.30pm on Saturday.
Last night two of the boys were named by family - Niko Hill and Javarney Drummond.
At least one call had been made to police about boy racing in the area shortly before the fatal carnage.
The group - five in the car and one in the boot - were travelling in a Nissan Bluebird sedan which struck a power pole and tore in two.
All five passengers - aged 15 and 16 - died at the scene.
The 19-year-old driver survived and was taken to Timaru Hospital with serious injuries.
He was well enough to post a message on social media yesterday afternoon, including a photograph of himself in his hospital bed, apologising for the crash.
"Hello everyone just wanted to say I'm not dead I am very very lucky to still be alive and I can't believe what has happened," he wrote, in a post seen by the Herald.
"And I am so so so sorry to the families that I have put in pain coz of stupid mistakes that I made that has costed five lives."
Some of his injuries are visible in the post.
Javarney's father Stephen told Stuff he had gone to bed on Saturday and said it was not unusual for his "social butterfly" son to arrive home later.
Just before midnight his daughter started getting messages about Javarney being killed in the crash.
Stephen Drummond then rushed to the Timaru police station and then had to identify hisson at the hospital.
"He's never done this. He's never got in a car, I don't understand it," he said.
"All his mates don't have cars, he went to school with the driver, at primary school. He talks to him and says hello to him, but he's never, ever been joyriding that I know of. I don't understand how it's actually unfolded."
Aoraki Area Commander Inspector Dave Gaskin said yesterday the driver was yet to be spoken to by police.
He said it was too soon to speculate or confirm details but he suspected due to the age of the driver he may not hold a full licence.
Gaskin said a number of people in the car were not wearing seatbelts.
"There were six people in the vehicle, there is only five sets of seatbelts," he told media.
"It is not possible at the moment to say who was wearing seatbelts, but I think it is pretty clear to say that only a very few, if anyone, were wearing seatbelts."
Niko Hill's father learned of his death through a phone call late on Saturday night.
He said his heart was broken. He was not ready to speak more about Niko last night as he prepared to travel to Timaru to support the teen's mother and wider family.
The area where the crash happened is well-known as being popular with boy racers, with a local resident phoning 111 about 6pm on Saturday night to complain about four cars racing and doing burnouts.
"The last thing I said to the call-taker was, 'If you don't send someone out here, someone will get killed', and 90 minutes later, we had this," Ray Colvill told the Herald.
A steady stream of mourners and locals wanting to pay their respects and lay flowers visited the crash site yesterday.
They came and wept at the concrete power pole, still standing, with a just few smudges of car paint near its solid base. Sobbing parents, devastated grandparents, a shaking aunty, and two cousins visited, trying to come to grips with what had happened.
They just felt a numbness, they said.
One father, tears filling red eyes, paced up and down the country road where the five boys died, muttering, "Why? What a waste!"
Among the mourners was Niko's cousin Meadow Bennett.
"I really am in shock," she told the Herald.
"You don't believe it until you see it. I don't believe he's gone.
"He's just a young, sweet kid... he doesn't...

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Richie Hardcore: Timaru car crash a wake up call for young men - Early Edition on Newstalk ZB