Toxic Gas Leak in Lake County Sends Dozens of People to the Hospital

Contact a truck accident injury lawyer now.

BEACH PARK, Ill. (May 2, 2019) –  A toxic gas leak caused a toxic cloud in Beach Park, Ill., sending 37 people to the hospital, including 11 firefighters and 3 police officers. Seven people are said to be in critical but stable condition.

CBS News reported the leak was discovered early in the morning on April 25 in the northern Chicago suburb from a tractor trailer hauling two separate two-ton containers of anhydrous ammonia, a colorless and dangerous gas that can cause breathing difficulties, burns, blisters, and is fatal in high concentrations. The substance is used by farmers as fertilizer and means of injecting soil with nitrogen.

Harmful plumes of gas spread throughout the surrounding neighborhoods, forcing school closures and a shelter-in-place order for buildings within a one-mile radius of the incident. Residents within a one-mile radius of the leak were initially told to close their windows and remain indoors, but that order was lifted at 10 a.m.

Two dozen law enforcement agencies responded to the leak, including a hazardous materials team. The first two officers who responded to the leak had to retreat because they were overcome by the ammonia.

The leak was contained within a few hours.

Though a vehicular incident was initially suspected as the cause of the leak, the Lake County Sheriff’s Department confirmed that the leak was not a result of a crash. As motorists witness in everyday driving, tractor trailers haul varying substances and goods in and around communities and on roadways. Though the reported leak was not the result of a truck accident, toxic and hazardous spills present a real concern from truck crashes.

Patrick A. Salvi concentrates his legal practice in cases concerning serious personal injury, medical malpractice, wrongful death, and mass torts. Mr. Salvi has achieved record-breaking jury verdicts and settlements on behalf of his clients throughout the state, including serving as lead counsel on a trial team that won an Illinois record-high $148 million jury verdict and a Lake County record $33 million jury verdict.