DICKINSON, N.D. (AP) - Three college softball players found dead after their sport utility vehicle went into a pond on a North Dakota farm during a stargazing trip likely drove straight into the water in the dark, authorities said Wednesday.
Stark County Sheriff Clarence Tuhy said the women's SUV was found resting on its wheels Tuesday in about 10 feet of water hidden by tall grass, with the doors and windows closed.
In these three undated photos provided by Dickenson State University, missing students, from left, Kyrstin Gemar, 22, of Grossmont, Calif., Ashley Neufeld, 21, of Brandon, Manitoba in Canada, and Afton Williamson, 20, of Lake Elsinore, Calif. are shown. The three North Dakota college softball players believed to have been on a stargazing trip were found dead inside a Jeep after signals from their last desperate phone calls helped lead authorities to a rural farm pond.
Auditor General of Canada Sheila Fraser tables the 2009 Fall Report in Ottawa, Ont., Tuesday November 3, 2009. She was joined by Commissioner of Environmental and Sustainable Development Scott Vaughan.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
In these three undated photos provided by Dickenson State University, missing students, from left, Kyrstin Gemar, 22, of Grossmont, Calif., Ashley Neufeld, 21, of Brandon, Manitoba in Canada, and Afton Williamson, 20, of Lake Elsinore, Calif. are shown.
AP Photo/Dickenson State University
In this undated photo, Dickinson State University's Ashley Neufeld, of Brandon, Manitoba, runs the bases during a softball game in Dickinson, N.D. Neufeld is one of three DSU students who were reported missing Monday, Nov 2, 2009. Neufled, 21, along with DSU softball players Kyrstin Gemar and Afton Williamson were reported missing Monday. Law enforcement officials are searching the area around Dickinson, N.D., for the women.
AP Photo/The Dickinson Press, Dustin Monke
A commuter wears face mask as a precaution against flu seen through a bus window in Kiev, Ukraine, Monday, Nov. 2, 2009. Ukrainian politicians have seized on the country's apparently mild swine flu outbreak as a political issue in the run-up to January's presidential election, a pivotal vote that could overturn the Orange Revolution of 2004 that swept a pro-Western government to power.
AP Photo/Sergei Chuzavkov
Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, leave with Governor-General Micahelle Jean and followed by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his wife, Laureen, after welcoming ceremonies Monday, November 2, 2009 in St. John's, Newfoundland.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz
A pickup truck plowed through the wall of a hotel in Aldergrove, B.C., Monday, then crashed through four rooms. The driver was slightly injured but no guests or hotel staff members were hurt. Police said the driver was leaving a parking lot across the street about midday Monday when he apparently suffered a medical event that rendered him unconscious.
CBC News
The Best Western Hotel in Aldergrove sustained serious damage when a man, who suffered a medical event, drove through the hotel around noon on Monday, Nov. 2, 2009. No one is injured in the incident and fire officials are on scene to investigate the accident.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sam Leung
The Best Western Hotel in Aldergrove sustained serious damage when a man, who suffered a medical event, drove through the hotel around noon on Monday, Nov. 2, 2009. No one is injured in the incident and fire officials are on scene to investigate the accident.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sam Leung
Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall and Governor General Michaelle Jean and Prime Minister Stephen Harper chat during welcoming ceremonies Monday, November 2, 2009 in St. John's, Newfoundland.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ryan Remiorz
President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama hand out candy at the White House, Saturday, Oct. 31, 2009 in Washington, on Halloween.
AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta
"When you're not familiar with an area like that it would have been very easy to drive into," Tuhy said.
The sheriff said the Dickinson State University students were on private property. He stopped short of saying they were trespassing.
No foul play is suspected in the deaths of Kyrstin Gemar, 22, of San Diego; Afton Williamson, 20, of Lake Elsinore, Calif.; and Ashley Neufeld, 21, of Brandon, Manitoba. The bodies of the women and Neufeld's dog were found inside the SUV after signals from their last desperate phone calls late Sunday helped lead authorities to the farm.
Police Lt. Rod Banyai said authorities do not expect autopsy results for a week or two. The autopsies will help determine the exact cause of death and whether the women were under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Authorities have said there is no indication they were. The North Dakota Highway Patrol also will examine the 1997 Jeep Cherokee to determine if the vehicle malfunctioned, Banyai said.
The students were believed to be in the Jeep when two of their friends received telephone calls late Sunday before the lines quickly went dead. Police described the first as a "very scratchy" call for help in which one of the students said they were near water.
Tuhy said the calls, which authorities were able to track to cell phone towers, were critical in leading searchers to the vehicle. He said it wasn't clear if emergency crews might have been able to reach the women had they called 911 instead of their friends.
"There could have probably been some location formed out of that (Sunday night) but if it would have been timely enough, I don't know," he said.
New York State troopers and Hawthorne firefighters work at the scene of a fatal accident in which 8 people were killed on the Tacpnic Parkway in Hawthorne July 26, 2009.
Two men died after one of two cars speeding along the northbound Don Valley Parkway in Toronto lost control during the evening of Monday, July 6, police said. The red Nissan 300ZX Twin Turbo spun out of control, smashed through a guardrail and came to a stop on the side of the road, its roof peeled away.
CBC News
Ontario Provincial Police Commissioner Julian Fantino called it a "very tragic day" for the force. He commented after a crash Monday, July 6, which killed a rookie officer and left another in hospital in serious but stable condition. Const. Allan Hack was one of two officers in a cruiser that crashed near Rodney, Ont., about midway between St. Thomas and Chatham.
The Canadian Press
Flower sit near the Kingston Mills locks on the Rideau Canal, at a memorial honouring four Montreal residents who died there in a car crash days earlier, in Kingston, Ontario on Thursday July 2, 2009. Investigators were still unable to say what happened to the four victims, whose bodies were found Tuesday morning inside a four-door Nissan Sentra that was underwater at the northern most lock of Kingston Mills Locks.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sunny Freeman
The Nissan Sentra was pulled out of the Kingston Mills Locks after it was discovered submerged early Tuesday, June 30.
CBC News
Police are investigating the circumstances surrounding the deaths of three sisters and another relative who were found inside a submerged car in locks northeast of Kingston. Ontario Provincial Police divers removed the bodies of three teens, aged 13, 17 and 19, and a 50-year-old woman described as a relative, from a vehicle found in the Kingston Mills locks around 4 p.m. Tuesday, June 30. The identities of the victims, who were all from Quebec, have not yet been released.
CBC News
Flames engulf the area of the Viareggio's railway station Tuesday, June 30, 2009. A freight train derailed in the middle of the night in northern Italy, setting off an explosion and a fire that killed at least 13 people and sent 50 others to the hospital, many with severe burns, officials said Tuesday. The 14-car train was traveling from the northern city of La Spezia to Pisa when a rear car plowed into a residential neighborhood beside the train station in the Tuscan seaside town of Viareggio just before midnight Monday.
AP Photo/Riccardo Dalle Luche
Firemen check burned cars in the area of the Viareggio's railway station Tuesday, June 30, 2009. A freight train derailed in the middle of the night in northern Italy, setting off an explosion and a fire that killed at least 13 people and sent 50 others to the hospital, many with severe burns, officials said Tuesday. The 14-car train was traveling from the northern city of La Spezia to Pisa when a rear car plowed into a residential neighborhood beside the train station in the Tuscan seaside town of Viareggio just before midnight Monday.
AP Photo/Riccardo Dalle Luche
A firefighter, unseen, sprays water on a car of a freight train in Viareggio, Tuesday, June 30, 2009, after it exploded just outside the station of this coastal town in northern Italy. A rail car filled with liquefied natural gas exploded when a freight train derailed in the middle of a small Italian town, setting off an inferno. At least 10 people were killed and 50 injured, officials said.
AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia
Italian Firefighters walk past burned houses in Viareggio, Tuesday, June 30, 2009, after a freight train exploded just outside the station of this coastal town in northern Italy. A rail car filled with liquefied natural gas exploded when a freight train derailed in the middle of a small Italian town, setting off an inferno. At least 10 people were killed and 50 injured, officials said.
AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia
A woman sits on a bench next to a burnt door of a collapsed house in Viareggio, Tuesday, June 30, 2009, after a freight train exploded just outside the station of this coastal town in northern Italy. A rail car filled with liquefied natural gas exploded when the freight train derailed in the middle of this small Italian town, setting off an inferno. At least 10 people were killed and 50 injured, officials said.
AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia
University President Richard McCallum said classes were canceled Wednesday and a memorial service was being planned on campus Thursday.
"It is times like this that we realize our sense of humanity and our sense of connection," he said.
Family members of the women planned to visit the site on Wednesday northwest of Dickinson, a city of 16,000 people that is about 100 miles west of Bismarck.
Gemar's father, Lenny, said Tuesday night after a prayer service on campus that "it's the worst day of my life."
Neufeld's mother, Bev Neufeld, said her family was trying to be strong.
"That's what she would want, and we have so much support here (on campus)," she said. "We know how much Ashley loved this school. I would just like everybody to remember Ashley's smile and personality."
The 2,700-student university listed Gemar as a senior business major who played third base on the softball team. Neufeld was a senior outfielder working on a psychology degree, and Williamson, a junior, was a pitcher majoring in psychology with a minor in coaching.
"I'm sure it will be difficult for quite a while. But we know that they'll be there with us. They would want us to play," softball teammate Jessica Huseby of Hamilton, Mont., said after the prayer service. "We just know they're going to be the 10th, 11th and 12th players on the field with us."
Prime Minister Stephen Harper holds a case of Yuengling beer presented to him outside his home by U.S. Ambassador David Jacobson. The beer was part of a wager the PM had with President Obama on the outcome of the Olympic gold medal hockey game which Canada won.
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