Zaire Lassiter Obituary, Death –  Zaire Lassiter Has Died In A Car Accident At least one-third of all fatal collisions are caused by speeding. It is the third-leading cause of highway accidents, according to the National Highway Transportation Safety Association (NHTSA). A 24-year-old driver was killed in an accident in Charlotte, and it appears that speed was a factor in his death. Zaire Lassiter has been proven to have vanished into thin air. Yoan Alberto Hernadez Tosca was speeding through traffic in a Honda Accord on a Sunday afternoon when he apparently overcorrected and lost control of the vehicle.

As a result of the incident, many people were injured, and one person died. The car ran off the road at the Winterhaven-Albemarle intersection, collided with a tree, and came to a stop. The driver and passenger were unable to exit the vehicle due to their respective disabilities. Rangel Garcia Cabrera, 30, and his twelve other passengers were able to exit the car thanks to the efforts of the firefighters. Both were rushed to the hospital because their injuries had the potential to be fatal. The driver had died, and the hospital had been notified.

It is unknown whether alcohol played a role in the one-car accident. It’s also unclear why the driver was driving so fast and swerving in and out of traffic. This raises yet another perplexing issue. When someone drives recklessly, they endanger not only the people inside their own vehicle but also the lives of all other drivers and passengers who are traveling nearby. Statistics show that young male drivers are far more likely than drivers of any other gender or age to be involved in an accident. According to a 2007 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration study, 39% of male drivers aged 15 to 20 who were killed in collisions were speeding at the time of the incident.

Even though the accident was horrific, much worse could have happened. Additional vehicles may have been involved as a result of one driver’s careless decision to drive, potentially resulting in additional accidents, injuries, or fatalities.