Fertilizer blast kills truck driver in Arkansas

This March 27, 2019 photo provided by Arkansas Department of Transportation shows a massive crater after a commercial truck hauling ammonium nitrate exploded Wednesday, March 27, on a highway in Camden, Ark., killing the driver. According to Arkansas State Police, the driver had called 911 early Wednesday to report that his brakes had caught fire, and he was killed when the truck later exploded. (ARDOT via AP)

From the Associated Press:

A commercial truck hauling a chemical commonly used as fertilizer exploded Wednesday on a highway in Arkansas, killing the driver and creating a massive crater in the road, authorities said.

The explosion happened west of the city of Camden, or about 100 miles (160 kilometers) south of Little Rock. According to Arkansas State Police, the driver had called 911 early Wednesday to report that his brakes had caught fire.

The driver, 63-year-old Randall McDougal, attempted to extinguish the blaze but was killed when the truck exploded, authorities said.

“It looks like a bomb went off,” Camden Fire Chief Robert Medford told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. “There’s a big hole in the ground on where the truck was at.”

State police said that McDougal was employed by Blann Trucking Co. and was hauling ammonium nitrate from El Dorado to Texarkana in south Arkansas.

The Arkansas Department of Transportation said crews would begin repairing the 15-foot (4.5-meter) crater once the wreckage from the accident was cleared. The affected road is a low-volume road that carries about 1,300 vehicles per day, department spokesman Danny Straessle said.