Speed, Not Mechanical Failure, to Blame in Paul Walker Crash
As suspected, investigators have
determined that speed was to blame in the crash that killed Paul Walker
and his business partner, Roger Rodas.
According to the Associated Press,
which was briefed on the crash investigation findings by a person who
reviewed the final report, it was unsafe driving, not mechanical failure
that caused the accident. The 2005 Porsche Carrera GT driven by Rodas
and carrying the "Fast & Furious" actor was going between 81 mph and
94 mph when the car began to drift as it lost control coming out of a
curve. The speed limit in the residential neighborhood is 45 mph.
Following the fatal incident on
Nov. 30, Porsche sent engineers to California to review the rare car's
wreckage. Reportedly, they found no problems after electrical systems,
brakes, throttle, fuel system, steering, suspension and other systems
were analyzed. Walker, 40, was about halfway done shooting “Fast &
Furious 7″ when the tragedy occurred.
Yahoo Movies caught up with
Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson at CinemaCon in Las Vegas on Tuesday, who
spoke about honoring Walker's character, Brian O'Conner, in the latest
installment of Universal's franchise.
"It's very important for everybody involved, of course," Johnson revealed.
"It's not easy, and it's a challenge when you have something like this —
a beloved person. Paul, as you guys know, he was truly one of the good
guys — a great dude, who didn't take himself seriously, loved what he
did, understood the business of the business. You got the real deal,
genuine guy when you got him. So it's important for everybody to
creatively honor him in the best way that we possibly can." Johnson
added that his heart ached most for Walker's 15-year-old daughter,
Meadow.
"The biggest pain I felt was for
his family, his daughter," Johnson explained. "We had talked about that a
multitude of times — how cool it is to be a dad. There's that really
special bond between a dad and his little girl. She'll always be his
little girl. … So my biggest pain was for his family and for his
daughter, mom, and dad."
To make a tough situation even more difficult, Meadow is currently at the center of a guardianship battle. Paul's mother, Cheryl Ann Walker, filed a legal petition to be appointed custodian of her granddaughter. Cheryl Ann, a registered nurse, claims that Meadow's mother, Rebecca McBrain, "has a drinking problem."
McBrain is expected to challenge for custody.
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