Infant Killed in Frankford Ambulance Crash as DUI Allegations Raise Serious Questions
A heartbreaking crash in Philadelphia’s Frankford section is drawing urgent attention to the standards that should govern emergency and medical transport vehicles. According to 6abc, a 2-month-old infant, identified as Marian Harris, died after a private ambulance crashed around 5:15 a.m. on Sunday, March 15, 2026, near Torresdale and Harbison Avenues. The infant’s mother was critically injured. Police say the ambulance driver was taken into custody and is suspected of driving under the influence.
The facts reported so far are deeply troubling. Investigators told 6abc that the family had called 911 for an unresponsive infant, but left home before first responders arrived and were being transported to the hospital in a MedStar ambulance when the crash occurred. Surveillance video reportedly shows the ambulance entering the intersection, striking another vehicle, hitting a pole, and flipping onto its side. Police also told reporters that the mother and infant were thrown through the windshield from the force of the impact.
Perhaps most alarming are the allegations surrounding how the ambulance was being operated. According to the report, investigators believe the driver was under the influence, traveling at a high rate of speed, operating without lights or sirens, and ran a red light before colliding with a Honda Accord. The driver is expected to face DUI-related charges.
When a crash involves an ambulance or other medical transport vehicle, the legal issues are often more complex than in an ordinary car accident. These cases may involve driver negligence, negligent hiring or retention, inadequate supervision, poor safety protocols, and failures by the ambulance company to enforce policies designed to protect patients and families. If the reporting is accurate, this crash will raise serious questions about whether preventable misconduct turned a medical emergency into an irreversible tragedy. That is an inference based on the allegations publicly reported so far, not a conclusion about ultimate liability.
Families place enormous trust in emergency and non-emergency transport providers. They expect sober, trained, and competent professionals to make careful decisions when every second matters. When that trust is broken, the consequences can be catastrophic. In cases involving fatal ambulance crashes, a full investigation often focuses on driver conduct, dispatch records, vehicle data, employer policies, training history, toxicology evidence, and whether the transport company ignored warning signs that should have kept a driver off the road.
At McEldrew Purtell, we follow cases like this because transportation negligence and wrongful death cases demand immediate scrutiny. In the earliest days after a crash, critical evidence can disappear unless it is preserved. Video footage, onboard vehicle data, maintenance records, personnel files, and communications between dispatch and drivers can all become central to determining what happened and who may be legally responsible.
This story is still developing, and the public facts may change as investigators release more information. As of Monday, March 16, 2026, 6abc reported that the infant had died, the mother remained in critical condition, and the driver was in custody and facing charges including DUI.
If your family has suffered a catastrophic injury or wrongful death involving an ambulance, commercial vehicle, or other transportation-related negligence, McEldrew Purtell is prepared to investigate. Contact us for a free consultation.
Article: https://6abc.com/post/infant-dies-ambulance-crash-frankford-section-city/18717067/
