Carbon monoxide present in Ford Explorer where 3 died, 2 others sickened
in Ohio, official says
[July 16, 2026]
By JOHN RABY
The
presence of carbon monoxide was confirmed in a parked vehicle in Toledo,
Ohio, where five people were found unresponsive and three of them died
Wednesday in what an official described as an accident.
The Ford Explorer had pulled over with a flat tire into a parking lot,
and the victims were discovered shortly after 11 a.m., Toledo Fire Chief
Allison Armstrong said. |

Emergency personnel respond to a hazardous material call on Phillips
Avenue in Toledo, Ohio, on Wednesday, July 15, 2026. (Alex Bracken/The
Blade via AP) |
|
City of Toledo spokesperson Rachel Hart said the victims
included a grandmother and her grandchildren. She said the
woman's son who had been called to help found the bodies.
Mayor Wade Kapszukiewicz said foul play was not suspected. He
said three of the victims died while two children were
hospitalized in critical condition. Their names, ages and
hometowns weren’t immediately released.
“Today, a family experienced a tragedy that no family should
ever have to endure,” the mayor said on Facebook.
Investigators later started the vehicle with the doors closed
and a meter inside. In a telephone interview, Armstrong said,
"we had a high spike of carbon monoxide inside the passenger
compartment on that vehicle."
She said the vehicle was towed by police.
“They’re going to have to do some further investigation to see
if they can identify how does that happen," she said. "I think
that’s an important piece of this that people want to know, and
they should know for everybody’s safety.”
Armstrong recalled a “very similar” incident several years ago
involving carbon monoxide that seeped into holes in the
floorboards of a vehicle.
Ford Explorers were part of a previous six-year investigation by
the federal government into exhaust odors in passenger cabins.
In 2023, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says
it reviewed more than 6,500 consumer complaints, tested SUVs in
the field and called in automotive, medical, environmental
health and occupational safety experts before determining that
the SUVs didn’t have high levels of carbon monoxide and didn’t
need to be recalled.
The probe covered nearly 1.5 million Explorers from the 2011 to
2017 model years.
Armstrong said it wasn’t immediately known what year the SUV
involved in Wednesday’s incident was made.
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights
reserved |
|
|