Two students found dead during routine school trip –footage reveals what happened seconds before crash

What should have been an exciting day for a group of middle school students quickly turned into a devastating tragedy on a quiet stretch of Highway 70 in Carroll County, Tennessee.

On Friday, March 27, a school bus carrying students from Kenwood Middle School to a competition collided with multiple vehicles — leaving a community in shock and two young lives lost.

A day meant for celebration
Every parent hopes their children can get to school safely each day. But accidents do happen — and when children are involved, it makes the tragedy all the more heartbreaking.

The students from Kenwood Middle School had spent months preparing for this moment, building an electric race car from scratch for the Toyota Hub City Grand Prix Greenpower USA Race in Jackson, Tennessee.

They had been looking forward to showing off everything they’d worked so hard on— but in an instant, life took a terrifying turn near the intersection of Highway 70 and Cedar Grove.

Shutterstock
Their bus crossed into oncoming traffic and slammed head-on into a Tennessee Department of Transportation dump truck. A Chevrolet Trailblazer was also involved in the crash.

29 people were on the bus, including 24 Kenwood Middle School students, four adults, and the driver, Sabrina Ducksworth.

Authorities are still investigating what caused the bus to drift over the double yellow lines, but Tennessee Highway Patrol Maj. Travis Plotzer described the scene as “a parent’s worst nightmare.”

Parents witness the unthinkable
In a heartbreaking twist, some parents were traveling behind the bus and saw the crash happen in real time.

Xaviel Lugo and his wife, Rosalee, were among them.

Their daughter was on board.

When the collision happened, Xaviel pulled over immediately while Rosalee ran toward the wreckage. Together, they began helping students out of the bus before emergency responders arrived.

“People were crying. It was loud. It was chaotic,” Rosalee told KKTV.

“The people in the back just thought that this was just a minor crash. They were telling everybody, ‘Just be calm.’ They didn’t know how bad the front was, but I could see from where I was standing that people were slumped over. There was blood on the floor.”

One student, Wesley, stood out in the chaos. According to Xaviel, as soon as the boy made it out, he began helping others without hesitation.

Xaviel eventually found his own daughter and helped her to safety. She was later airlifted due to her injuries but is expected to recover.

Still, the trauma of what she witnessed will stay with her — she saw one of the classmates who didn’t survive.

Dashcam footage shows the bus veering across the double yellow lines before crashing head-on into the dump truck. Early reports indicate the truck was not at fault, though the investigation is still ongoing.

Remembering Zoe and Arianna
At least seven people were airlifted to hospitals, with several taken to Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital in Nashville. Others were treated and released locally.

But not everyone made it.

Two eighth-grade girls — identified by the community as Zoe and Arianna — lost their lives in the crash.

As the official process continues, loved ones have begun sharing who these girls were.

Zoe’s family described her as “one-of-a-kind, smart, insanely funny, and losing her will never make sense to any of us.”

A fundraiser created in her honor quickly gained support, reflecting just how many lives she touched.

Arianna / GoFundMe
Arianna’s story carries another layer of heartbreak. Her father was overseas at the time of her death, leaving the family to navigate both grief and the challenge of bringing him home.

She was remembered as “a bright light” in her family’s life — a sentiment echoed by the overwhelming support shown through donations and messages.

A community comes together
On Saturday evening, students, families, and neighbors gathered at Kenwood Middle School for a vigil, honoring the two girls and supporting one another through unimaginable grief.

Principal Karen Miller urged families to stay close and support their children in the days ahead.

“Please continue to pray with us for our students, families, faculty, and staff,” she said. “I am grateful for the strength of our Kenwood community, and I trust we will all support each other during this difficult time.”

Counselors are expected to be available as students return to school.

For those who witnessed the crash — especially parents like Xaviel Lugo — the impact is impossible to put into words.

Zoe Davis / GoFundMe
He acknowledged that he cannot imagine what the families of the two girls are going through, but made it clear that the community will stand by them.

The National Transportation Safety Board is now stepping in, launching a full investigation into driver performance, student safety measures, and how school transportation is regulated across Tennessee.

For survivors like Lani Lugo, the shock of what happened is only just beginning to sink in. In a split second, everything changed.

”I feel the bus move, and I hear like a boom,” Lugo told Newschannel5.

”Everything’s shaking, and I open my eyes, and I look out the window, and all I see is the woods.”

Lugo also shared memories of the classmates who tragically lost their lives, including Zoe and Arianna.

”They were great people. I had drama club with Zoe at the beginning of the year; it was super fun,” Lugo said. ”She did a play, and she was amazing. She’s a great actor, very passionate.”

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