
The last thing Nascar fan Whitney Turner saw before she turned and ran was the undercarriage of Kyle Larson’s race car flying toward her Saturday in the grandstands at the Daytona International Speedway.
“It was a scene from a horror movie,” said Turner, 33, whose fibula bone on her right leg was shattered by flying debris.
Turner of Tell City, Indiana, was one of more than 30 fans injured in a multi-car accident on the last lap of the Nationwide Series race a day before Sunday’s prestigious Daytona 500.
Turner is one of three fans seeking damages who this week signed on with Matt Morgan of the Orlando personal injury law firm Morgan & Morgan.
Turner’s lawyer said, based on Nascar history, “a lot of times they resolve these claims without having to go through litigation. So hopefully we can come to an amicable resolution on the value of these claims and move on.”
The injuries happened when rookie driver Larson’s car went airborne and sailed into the fence in the frightening crash, although he was able to climb out of the wreckage afterward.