StoriesJune 2, 2024

Police say a monster truck performing for spectators in Maine clipped an aerial power line, toppling several utility poles and sending two people to the hospital

AP
This photo provided by the Topsham Police Department shows a lobster-themed monster truck that clipped an aerial power line, toppling several utility poles while performing for a crowd at the Topsham Fairgrounds on Saturday, June 1, 2024.
This photo provided by the Topsham Police Department shows a lobster-themed monster truck that clipped an aerial power line, toppling several utility poles while performing for a crowd at the Topsham Fairgrounds on Saturday, June 1, 2024.Uncredited - hogp, ASSOCIATED PRESS

TOPSHAM, Maine (AP) — A lobster-themed monster truck performing for spectators in Maine clipped an aerial power line, toppling several utility poles and sending two people to hospitals, police said. Others suffered minor injuries.

The Topsham Fairgrounds was hosting the monster truck event on Saturday when a vehicle dubbed the Crushstation bounced up a ramp, went airborne and hit the power line. Video showed people scrambling as the snagged line triggered a cascade of events with several utility poles and a transformer falling near the grandstands, with live wires on the ground.

Two people were transported to hospitals and others suffered minor injuries, Topsham police reported. The driver of the truck was not injured.

Daily headlines, straight to your inboxRead it online first and stay up-to-date, delivered daily at 7 AM

“I’m still a little bit shaken up,” said Mike Hersom, who was watching with his 3-year-old son and narrowly avoided the falling transformer.

He said he watched in disbelief for a moment before jumping to action to move away; he saw just how close the transformer came to him and his son when he watched a video. “When I watched the video, it was like, ‘Holy smokes. That’s crazy,’" he said Sunday.

The promoter of the event didn’t return an email.

The Maine-based monster truck was shaped to look like a lobster and named the Crushstation, a play on the word crustacean. Its owners didn't immediately return an email seeking comment on Sunday.

Daily headlines, straight to your inboxRead it online first and stay up-to-date, delivered daily at 7 AM