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USC

The Student Who Grabbed the Wheel: USC's Sigma Phi Epsilon Bus on I-10 in Mississippi

SCotheradvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On April 5, 2024, a charter bus carrying 56 University of South Carolina Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity members to a New Orleans formal blew a tire and crashed on Interstate 10 in Hancock County, Mississippi, ejecting the driver and injuring 11 people. A student heroically grabbed the steering wheel and brought the drifting bus to a stop, preventing what authorities said could have been a far more catastrophic crash. USC issued a statement confirming the incident and arranged transportation and mental health resources for affected students.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
11
Institution
University of South Carolina
Public R1 · SC
~36,000 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTWebsite
Approximate reconstruction385 chars
The University of South Carolina was informed tonight of an accident in Mississippi involving a charter bus carrying USC fraternity members and their guests traveling to an event in New Orleans. We are working to gather information and are in contact with local officials. The well-being of our students is our top priority. We will share updates as more information becomes available.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

CNN's April 6 report quoted the university's initial statement saying USC 'was informed tonight of an accident in Mississippi involving a charter bus carrying USC fraternity members'; the timing suggests the statement was issued Friday evening after the Friday afternoon crash
The crash occurred on I-10 westbound in Hancock County, MS, approximately 3 PM CDT; a tire blew out, causing the driver to stand while holding the wheel, then the bus came down hard, shattering the windshield and ejecting the driver
Mississippi Highway Patrol initially misidentified the students as being from University of South Alabama before correcting the report to University of South Carolina
FOLLOW-UPWebsite
Approximate reconstruction577 chars
In an update regarding the accident in Mississippi involving USC fraternity members: USC remains in contact with local officials regarding students who were transported for treatment. Travel arrangements have been made for students who wish to return to Columbia. Once they arrive back on campus, USC will provide mental health resources and academic support services for students involved in the accident and anyone affected by it. We are grateful for the swift response of Mississippi first responders and the heroic actions of the student who helped bring the bus to a stop.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

CNN's April 6 report described USC's updated statement confirming contact with local officials, travel arrangements for students returning to Columbia, and mental health resources upon return to campus
The student who grabbed the wheel and stopped the bus was described by Mississippi Highway Patrol officials as performing a 'heroic action' that prevented the bus from flipping; multiple news accounts highlighted this as preventing a potentially fatal mass-casualty event
The fraternity's formal event in New Orleans was the occasion for the trip; the bus was a private charter, not a university-operated vehicle -- a pattern consistent with other Greek-life transportation incidents in the archive
Context

Background

On Friday, April 5, 2024, approximately 56 members and guests of the University of South Carolina's Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity boarded a charter bus in Columbia, South Carolina, for a formal event in New Orleans. Around 3:00 PM CDT, traveling west on Interstate 10 in Hancock County, Mississippi, a tire blew out. Driver Tina Wilson, 55, stood up to grip the wheel as the bus fishtailed, but the bus came down hard enough to shatter the front windshield, ejecting Wilson onto the roadway. The bus continued traveling out of control for approximately half a mile. In what Mississippi authorities called a 'heroic action,' a student seized the steering wheel and brought the bus to a controlled stop, preventing the vehicle from overturning. Wilson and one student were critically injured and airlifted to hospitals; nine other students were transported by ambulance. All 11 injured survived. USC learned of the incident Friday evening and issued an initial statement confirming the incident and pledging to remain in contact with local authorities. In a follow-up statement, USC described arrangements for student return transportation and mental health support upon return to Columbia. Mississippi Highway Patrol initially misidentified the students as University of South Alabama students before correcting to University of South Carolina. The incident illustrates the gap between campus-emergency notification systems and off-campus Greek-life transportation events: USC's response was statement-based rather than a campus-alert system notification, consistent with the modal pattern when an incident occurs far from campus and does not constitute a Clery emergency notification trigger.
Analysis

Key Findings

11 injured (driver critically, one student critically) when a charter bus carrying 56 USC Sigma Phi Epsilon members blew a tire on I-10 in Hancock County, MS on April 5, 2024
A student's heroic intervention -- grabbing the wheel after the driver was ejected -- prevented what authorities said could have been a fatal rollover; the bus had traveled half a mile out of control
USC's communications were statement-based, not campus-alert-system notifications, because the incident occurred approximately 600 miles from campus in Mississippi with no ongoing threat to the Columbia campus
Mississippi Highway Patrol initially misidentified the passengers as University of South Alabama students; media corrections followed within hours
All alert text is reconstructed (isVerbatimConfirmed: false); USC's statements were paraphrased by news outlets, not quoted in full
Outcome
11 injured: the bus driver (Tina Wilson, 55, of Roebuck SC) and a student were critically injured and airlifted; 9 students transported by ambulance to a local hospital. All survived. A student's heroic intervention stopped the bus after the driver was ejected through the windshield. USC arranged return transportation and mental health resources for students returning to Columbia.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
Tags
transportationcharter-bus-crashfraternitygreek-lifesouth-carolinamississippiheroic-responsetire-blowoutoff-campusstatement-onlyno-campus-alert-system
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion