The Carrollton bus collision is remembered less as an isolated crash than as a public-safety failure with consequences far beyond one stretch of Interstate 71. A drunk wrong-way driver, an older bus design, and limited emergency exits converged in a case that reshaped how Kentucky and national safety advocates talked about impaired driving, school-bus standards, and accountability after mass-casualty crashes.
On May 14, 1988, a 34-year-old factory worker named Larry Wayne Mahoney drove his pickup northbound in the southbound lanes of Interstate 71 roughly 5 miles south of Carrollton, Kentucky, and struck a church bus head-on. The bus was carrying 67 people — 66 passengers and a driver — home from King's Island amusement park in Ohio. The impact punctured the bus's fuel tank, and fire swept through the vehicle.
Mahoney's blood alcohol concentration was .24% — nearly two and a half times the legal limit in Kentucky at the time, which was .10%. He had been drinking at a bar and at a friend's house before the crash. He had a prior DUI arrest in 1984.
Twenty-seven people died — 24 of them children — and 34 others were injured. The victims were predominantly ages 10 to 15, mostly 13 or 14 years old. No one died from the crash impact alone; all fatalities resulted from fire and smoke. Six of the 67 people on the bus were uninjured.
In December 1989, a Kentucky jury convicted Mahoney of 27 counts of manslaughter, 16 counts of assault, and 27 counts of wanton endangerment. He was sentenced to 16 years in prison and was released on September 1, 1999, after serving approximately nine and a half years with good behavior credit.
The crash prompted significant safety reforms. Kentucky mandated that school buses carry nine emergency exits, have fuel tanks surrounded by protective cages, and feature stronger frames, reinforced roofs, high-backed seats, and flame-retardant materials. Diesel fleets were encouraged since diesel fuel is less flammable than gasoline. NTSB investigations led to recommendations for the phaseout of pre-1977 buses. The crash also contributed to the national drunk-driving reform movement; six days after the crash, Kentucky Governor Wallace Wilkinson announced stricter enforcement and support for stronger bus safety standards.