Autopsies on Paul Walker and Roger Rodas have corroborated what many people believed: Rodas was the driver in the crash; Walker was the passenger.
Walker died of the "combined effects of traumatic and thermal
injuries," the Los Angeles county coroner's office said Wednesday. The
determination means the impact and the resulting heat and fire caused his
death.
Rodas died of "multiple traumatic injuries," the coroner's report
said. The crash was an accident, the coroner's office said, and toxicology
results could take six to eight weeks.
The autopsies were completed Tuesday, but investigators had placed a
"security hold" on the results. The coroner's office did not give a
reason for the secrecy.
Production of Walker's latest movie will be shut down "for a period of
time," the studio said Wednesday. "At this time we feel it is our
responsibility to shut down production on 'Fast & Furious 7' for a period
of time so we can assess all options available to move forward with the
franchise," Universal Pictures said in a statement.
Four days after the crash that killed the actor and his financial manager,
big questions remain unanswered, including: Did anything go wrong with the
vehicle?
The Porsche Carrera GT the two men were in has three times the horsepower of
the average car.
It's powered by a V-10, 610-horsepower engine. At $450,000 new, it flies
down the road and is notoriously difficult to handle. A top driver has called
the car "scary," Autoweek magazine reported. Rodas was the sixth
owner of this one, the magazine said.
Authorities say speed was a factor in the crash. Still, Walker and Rodas
were experienced drivers, leading many to question whether something went wrong
with the vehicle. Jim Torp, a car enthusiast who was at the charity event where
Rodas and Walker had been just before the crash, said he thought he heard some
kind of blast before the car slammed into a light pole.
"What the first explosion was -- I don't know if their tire blew up,
because it sounded like a tire blew on the car," Torp told CNN on Monday.
How fast were they going?
The area where the crash took place -- a wide business park road in
Valencia, California -- has a reputation for being popular with drivers who
like the thrill of going fast.
In recent years, authorities have tried to stop the speeding in the area. A
45-mph speed limit sign was on the light pole knocked down by the Porsche.
A security camera video, which does not show the car itself, suggests that
black smoke started to rise from the vehicle about a minute after the light
pole and tree fell.
A Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department investigation is focused on how
fast the 2005 vehicle was going.
Skid marks on the asphalt near the crash site, which indicate a car had done
doughnut spins, also are being examined, but Torp told CNN that he looked
closely at the skid marks and believes they were left by a car with smaller
tires.
CNN

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