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Sports car driver critically injured in Rancho Santa Fe crash

CHP says driver of rare race car was speeding; three others injured

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A 21-year-old Rancho Santa Fe man was critically injured and his passenger also suffered major injuries when a speeding sports car, a rare Ariel Atom, went out of control on a curve on Christmas Eve and struck an SUV head-on, California Highway Patrol officers said.

A 62-year-old San Diego man and a woman in the Ford Expedition were transported to Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla with minor to moderate injuries from the Rancho Santa Fe crash, California Highway Patrol Officer Jim Bettencourt said.

Updated on Dec. 26

The San Diego County Medical Examiner's Office said Saturday that the driver, identified as Barry Alexander Moores, 21, of Rancho Santa Fe, died at 3:58 p.m. on Christmas Day at Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla.

They appeared to be on their way to a Christmas Eve function, and a holiday cake from the SUV was on the road, CHP Officer Chris Parent said.

The driver of the Ariel Atom, considered one of the fastest street-legal cars in the world, was westbound on La Orilla, near El Camino Real, at a high rate of speed when he lost control on the winding two-lane road shortly after 2 p.m., Parent said. He spun into the eastbound lane and hit the SUV.

An Ariel Atom automobile. Courtesy arielmotor.co.uk
An Ariel Atom automobile. Courtesy arielmotor.co.uk

Both the driver and passenger, a 21-year-old Mira Mesa man, were wearing helmets. They were unconscious when paramedics and firefighters arrived, CHP Officer Robert Catano said.

A fire in the SUV's engine was quickly extinguished, said Julie Taber, spokeswoman for the Rancho Santa Fe Fire Protection District. Firefighters from Solana Beach assisted.

The driver of the sports car was transported to Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla, and his passenger was flown by medical helicopter to Palomar Medical Center in Escondido, Parent said. The driver’s injuries are life-threatening, Bettencourt said.

Parent said it was not yet determined how fast the driver was going or if he had been racing at the time. The posted speed limit in the area is 40 mph, he said.

Such crashes are particularly difficult at holidays, when families “aren’t supposed to be spending time in hospitals,” Parent said. A relative of the driver’s came to the collision scene, he said.

Bettencourt said it was not yet determined if either drugs or alcohol were factors in the crash.

Parent said that in his 16 years in the CHP, it was the first time he had seen an Ariel Atom.

The car was designed in 1996 and was first constructed in the United States in 2006. About 80 Ariel Atoms have been made in the United States since then; TMI Auto Tech has produced them since 2008. Most sell for about $80,000.

The tubular skeleton is on the outside of the car with no side panels or roof; the car’s listed weight is 1,350 pounds and it is 11 feet long.

The car can go from zero to 60 mph in 2.9 seconds, and is used to race in Autocrosses, with a special RaceAtom series based in Virginia.

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