Grand jury adds charges in fatal I-95 bus crash

Summary

A Virginia grand jury added charges against a tour bus driver in a May 30 I-95 crash that killed five people.

Why this matters

The case affects a criminal prosecution tied to a five-fatality highway crash and has prompted federal review of how a commercial driver’s license was issued. It also raises scrutiny of commercial driver training and licensing oversight.

A Stafford County grand jury on Monday indicted Jing Sheng Dong, 48, of Staten Island, New York, on three additional felony counts of involuntary manslaughter and one misdemeanor count of reckless driving in connection with a May 30 tour bus crash on southbound Interstate 95 that killed five people.

The new indictments brought the total to five felony involuntary manslaughter counts, one for each victim, along with the reckless driving charge. The charges supplemented two initial involuntary manslaughter counts filed against Dong on May 31.

Stafford Commonwealth’s Attorney Eric Olsen said a capias was issued after the indictments, and Virginia State Police served Dong with the new charges at the hospital where he remained after the crash. He was being held without bond in the custody of the Rappahannock Regional Jail while recovering from his injuries.

The crash happened early May 30 in a work zone, when a tour bus operated by E&P Travel of Kings Mountain, North Carolina, struck multiple vehicles.

Investigators reported little to no evidence of braking by the bus driver. Olsen had previously said probable cause existed that Dong was driving in a criminally negligent manner.

The case also drew federal scrutiny over Dong’s commercial driver’s license. The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, part of the U.S. Department of Transportation, issued a subpoena to New York state on Monday seeking records related to Dong’s initial commercial driver’s license, entry-level driver training, and training at 7 CDL Driving School. The state had until 10 a.m. Wednesday to comply or face possible penalties, including civil or criminal contempt.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said Dong, who immigrated from China and became a U.S. citizen, does not speak English. New York issued his commercial driver’s license in 2024.

Dong remained hospitalized but in custody.

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