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Driver Kills 1 and Injures 17 at Fund-Raiser, Then Kills Another, Police Say

A fund-raiser to help families in a Pennsylvania fire that killed 10 descended into chaos after a car crashed into the crowd. The driver then killed his mother, the police said.

A driver plowed into a crowd of people in Berwick, Pa., who had gathered on Saturday at a fund-raiser for families affected by a fire that had killed 10 people a week earlier.Credit...WNEP

In a pair of horrific scenes on Saturday night that compounded the tragedy of a recent fatal fire in eastern Pennsylvania, a man plowed his car into a fund-raising event for families affected by that fire, killing one and injuring 17, then drove off and fatally beat a woman before the police arrested him, the authorities said.

The suspect, identified by the police as Adrian Oswaldo Sura Reyes, 24, was arraigned on two counts of homicide and denied bail. He is being held at the Columbia County Correctional Facility.

Investigators identified the woman who was beaten to death as the suspect’s mother, Rosa D. Reyes, The Press Enterprise of Bloomsburg, Pa., reported, citing court records. Investigators said that Mr. Reyes told them he hit his mother with his car and then struck the woman, who appeared to be unconscious, over the head with a hammer several times.

Five of the injured in the crash in Berwick, a borough about 45 miles southwest of Scranton, were in critical condition late Sunday, said a spokesman for Geisinger Medical Center, where many of the victims were taken.

Ms. Reyes was found dead in neighboring Nescopeck, which was the site of the fatal fire on Aug. 5 that tore through a two-story home and killed 10 people.

The woman who died at the crash scene was identified in court records as Rebecca L. Reese, who was dragged by the car, the police said. She was one of at least 10 people who were struck by the car, investigators said after watching surveillance video. They said the vehicle sped up as it neared the roughly 75 people gathered in a barricaded parking lot.

The car never stopped after cutting through the crowd, investigators said in the court records.

About six minutes after receiving calls about the crash, a Nescopeck resident who lives less than two miles away reported to police that a man was beating a woman with a hammer, according to the court documents. When the man asked the attacker — later identified as Mr. Reyes — what he was doing, Mr. Reyes told him to “get back” while holding up the hammer, investigators said.

In an interview with investigators, Mr. Reyes said he was “extremely frustrated” while he was driving through Berwick, saw a crowd gathered outside, and turned his car around to drive through it, according to court documents.

“He was tired of fighting with his mother, including about money, and wanted to be done with it,” investigators said Mr. Reyes told them, according to the court documents.

The fund-raiser was meant to benefit the victims and families of the house fire, including Harold Baker, a volunteer firefighter who responded to the fire and ended up losing his 22-year-old daughter and 19-year-old son, as well as six other family members, in the blaze. Among those killed in the fire in Nescopeck were three children, ages 5, 6 and 7, the Pennsylvania State Police said. The oldest victim was 79.

In a cruel twist, just eight days after the fire, Mr. Baker responded to the scene Saturday in Nescopeck, where the woman was killed. He said a daughter-in-law and several other relatives had been injured, and an aunt of his daughter-in-law had been killed, in the crash at the fund-raiser.

“I haven’t processed the fire yet and now I got to deal with this,” he said.

The crash on Saturday night added another wave of grief to a small community devastated by the fire that was described as “violent” and “forceful.” The cause of the fire has not been released. Trooper Anthony Petroski on Sunday said that Mr. Reyes was not currently a suspect in the fire.

Area residents struggled to process what had happened in barely more than a week’s time. The confusion and anger were compounded because there were so many unanswered questions about the fire, Robin Massina, a Berwick resident who is the daughter of the Nescopeck mayor, said in an interview late Saturday.

“What is this madness?” Ms. Massina said. “Why is it happening? We’re a small town that probably hasn’t been in the news since the flood of like 1978.”

She said that the community had pulled together after the fire, and that she believed enough money had been raised so that families could bury their loved ones and get back on their feet. The event on Saturday demonstrated the community’s spirit, but the violence that followed destroyed the healing process.

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The fire killed 10 people, including three children.Credit...Sean McKeag/The Citizens' Voice, via Associated Press

Before the crash, Lauren Hess, the owner of Intoxicology Department, the bar and restaurant that hosted the benefit, said she had quickly planned the event to help people affected by the fire, according to WNEP, a TV station based in Scranton. Donations from the community had poured in, she said.

“I got a call on Friday and I was immediately like, ‘What can I do to help because they are going through so much grief and pain?’” Ms. Hess told the station, adding that she was friends with mothers who lost children in the fire.

The event had started joyously, with scenes of laughing children, country music and water-balloon fights. “It’s going to be an amazing day!” organizers had posted on Facebook early Saturday.

The bar posted a statement late Saturday on Facebook calling the day “an absolute tragedy” and said that it would be closed until further notice.

Ms. Massina, the Nescopeck mayor’s daughter, said that the community rarely saw violence “other than your stupid Saturday night bar fights.”

“And now it’s devastation after devastation, literally a few days apart,” she said.

Christine Chung contributed reporting.

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