Airborne car flies into upper floor of California building

Police in Santa Ana say the car clipped a median and flew about 18 metres before slamming into a dental office.

The crash rattled guests in a motel next door, but the dental office was closed at the time.
The crash rattled guests in a motel next door, but the dental office was closed at the time.  (Orange County Fire Authority)  

A Nissan sedan became airborne and crashed into a California dental office Sunday morning, coming to rest dangling out of the building’s second story, the authorities said.

The police in Santa Ana, California, said the car clipped a median outside the building and flew about 18 metres before slamming into the 17th Street Dental Office.

The crash, which happened at about 5:25 a.m. Pacific time, rattled guests in a motel next door, but the dental practice was closed at the time.

The Los Angeles County Fire Department used a specialized forklift and wrecker to remove the car, the police said. One of the two people inside the vehicle was able to exit on his own, but emergency workers had to remove the other person, a police spokesperson said.

Workers with heavy equipment remove the Nissan from the dental office on Sunday.
Workers with heavy equipment remove the Nissan from the dental office on Sunday.  (CAPT. STEPHEN HORNER/The New York Times)  
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The driver told officers he had used drugs before the crash and was taken to a hospital for treatment of minor injuries, the police said. The spokesperson said authorities had filed a charge of driving under the influence but the driver had not yet been arraigned because he was in the hospital.

The passenger also suffered minor injuries.

On Sunday afternoon, the car was gone from the building, but a giant hole remained on the second floor of the dental office. The owner of the practice could not be reached for comment.

A woman who works at the motel next door said it was fortunate the motel was unscathed. “Inside, it’s a major loss,” the woman, who declined to provide her name, said. “It’s a big hole.”