Crash into house leaves trail of damage in Youngstown
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (WKBN) – A crash in Youngstown left a woman's garage in shambles aftera car slammed into her property and then sped off.
Now, police are searching for the driver who left behind a trail of damage.
Angela Scott says it sounded like a bomb went off Monday night, but what she heard was something that hit much closer to home.
'I heard a big boom. I look out the big bedroom window and I see a car in my garage,' she said.
Around 8 p.m., a car went barreling through Scott's garage, plowing straight into her car parked inside and pushing it through the back of the garage. The driver regrouped, reversed and drove away.
'I saw a young man open the back door and a kid fall out of the car. I ran downstairs to see if everybody was okay,' Scott said.
She said she saw several people in the car, including children. None of them were wearing seatbelts.
Scott's grandson was able to snap a picture of the license plate of the grey Dodge Durango before it sped away.
'There were three adults and four children in that car, and nobody was in a seatbelt. I don't know what's going on with those kids, I'm concerned about them,' Scott said.
The crash also damaged Scott's home, ripping off heating vents and damaging a side door.
'I don't want carbon monoxide backing up into my house. They hit the house, and the vents are all broken,' Scott said.
Her vehicle is undrivable, trapped in the debris, but Scott is thankful that the crash wasn't much worse. 'I have grandkids, and they're out here playing on the trampoline or playing in the driveway. And I'm just so thankful they weren't here yesterday because it could've been a whole lot more tragic than it was,' she said. As she waits for answers and insurance, Scott says now she's left in limbo.
'I don't like standing here now because I don't know what could happen, and I wouldn't have imagined it prior to yesterday.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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It's hard to forget the calamitous events of the 2021 Astroworld Festival, as what began as a carefree Travis Scott-run concert event quickly spiraled into a harrowing nightmare. On Nov. 5, 2021, at NRG Park in Houston, a deadly catastrophe had unfolded after a massive crowd surge during Scott's headlining performance. In the end, 10 people died, aged between 9 and 27, and hundreds more suffered physical injuries as well as emotional turmoil. In clips that circulated online, attendees screamed for help — cries that they say went unheard— as no one behind the festival stepped in to end the event immediately. There were reports of people crushed in different parts of the overwhelming crowd, experiencing breathing difficulties, and, for some, cardiac arrest. 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Still, what they say they endured the night of Astroworld — and every day that's followed — mirrors the sentiments shared by other victims' loved ones featured in the film. 'It was pretty horrific,' Michelle Dubiski, Madison's mother, laments, thinking back on the day that all hell broke loose. The hours before her daughter and son, Ty, who she says were 'inseparable best friends,' traveled to the Astroworld Festival together were much different. 'They were excited all day from the beginning of the morning,' Brian says. 'FaceTiming both of us. Madison getting ready to go, sending us pictures of what she was wearing. They were fans of Travis's and had seen him before, so they were excited and ready to go. And unfortunately, it turned into a horrible tragedy.' As Michelle remembers it, Madison, her brother, and their three childhood best friends arrived at the festival around 5:30 p.m., oblivious to the chaos that had occurred earlier that day when some attendees breached the entry gates and rushed past security to storm the festival grounds. 'All of us were unaware of that, or the kids would not have remotely been going,' she asserts. Even while at the event, Michelle says she and Brian were still speaking with their kids, getting more pictures that Madison had sent. 'But then, at a certain point,' when cell service dropped out, 'we lost any sort of communication.' That's when things took a turn for the worse. It started when Michelle received a phone call from one of Madison's best friends, who was not at Astroworld that night, but also got a call from friends telling her to get to Madison because she had been hurt. 'I couldn't even put two words together,' Michelle recalls, noting that she initially couldn't get in touch with her son either, because of poor cell reception in the area. 'So we immediately jump up and start calling hospitals.' It turns out that, in the interim, Ty and Madison got separated amid the chaos, while he and his friends were shifted to another area of the festival where others had been displaced. 'So he had no idea until Brian and I were able to get a hold of him, saying, 'You've got to get to the med tents and find Madison.'' Forty-five minutes of scrambling passed before Michelle received another phone call, this time from a local hospital, stating that Madison was there. But from there, she says, 'It was just devastating.' 'We were frantic,' Brian adds. 'It's just that feeling, that gut feeling, that something bad has happened. And Ty being frantic, and us trying to communicate with him as he's running from tent to tent — I think he had lost both of his shoes from the crowd surge — the whole thing was chaotic.' The parents didn't know what to make of the mayhem, as they had never experienced such pandemonium from a music festival of all events, although Brian acknowledges that there have been other disasters in the past — like the 1990 Glastonbury Festival and Woodstock '99, which was also a documentary subject in Netflix's 'Trainwreck' series. Still, nothing could've prepared the two for the unexpected news of their daughter's death. 'There's nothing more imaginable than walking into a hospital and having a doctor basically just look at you and not have to say anything and just shake his head,' Brian says. 'It's haunting.' 'As parents,' Michelle adds, 'you spend your whole life protecting your children to keep them out of harm's way. 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The Pink Bows Foundation's biggest initiative, so far, has been launching The Showstop® Procedure, a training and certification program created by global experts in crowd safety and management that's helping to set new standards in the event space and, further, preventing injuries and fatalities like those from Astroworld. 'We have the first one in the world that's been created essentially, where it comes with an accredited certification,' says Brian. 'The curriculum was worked out through and approved by the International Risk and Safety Management Group. We went out and vetted what we considered to be the top two crowd safety experts in the world, and that was Steve Allen and Dr. Mark Hamilton, both extremely respected in this industry.' The program first launched in Houston, where Brian and Michelle hoped to start small before rolling out to other regions to begin 'getting the wheels going and start making an impact.' 'And I think we've done that,' he says. They claim to have already trained and certified over 200 individuals who have completed the process within the last 90 to 120 days, and aim to continue helping venues, promoters and the live entertainment industry worldwide. Through this work, the foundation has garnered support from public figures like Sir Paul McCartney, musician Jim Kerr, and renowned promoter Barrie Marshall, as well as global event safety alliances. When it launched three years ago, Brian says he and Michelle didn't have 'any idea we would be able to grow like this and be surrounded by such great human beings and support and people that have helped the foundation make such strides.' However, through their own education, help from others and the progress they have made so far, they feel assured that they're doing all the right things to honor Madison's memory. 'I don't think there's anyone out there who can dispute that what we're doing is for the better good,' says Brian. 'We want to continue doing that in every way we can. And we're proud of the work that our entire team, our foundation, our board, and all of our representatives and volunteers have done.' 'We owe that to our daughter so that she didn't die in vain,' he adds. 'We know she would be fighting for both of us if the tables were turned, and we want to create a legacy in a positive manner.' In between losing Madison and establishing the Pink Bows Foundation, Brian and Michelle filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Scott, Live Nation, and other event promoters and organizers. The families of the other nine victims also sued over their loved ones' deaths. By May 2024, all 10 cases were settled for undisclosed amounts, but that didn't bring the Dubiski family closure. 'There's not any type of settlement that can bring our daughter back,' says Brian. 'I think the closure for us was getting past that so that we can breathe and try to start healing.' 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It's really nice to hear people genuinely thank our team for providing that.' The parents hope to continue hosting the designated spaces at more concert events and, one day, even facilities for sports games. More than that, though, they want to make sure, through the Pink Bows Foundation and the Astroworld memorial that still stands at NRG Park, people never forget what happened to their daughter and the other Astroworld victims. 'Sometimes when tragedies happen, people go on their way because it didn't affect them,' Michelle concludes. 'Having the memorial there is a constant reminder that lives were lost here. This is why we're doing what we're doing. I think it makes a huge difference.' Astroworld Was A Crowd Control Nightmare. Here's What Could Have Prevented It. 'Someone's Going To End Up Dead': New Report Details 'Chaos' Of Astroworld Fest Travis Scott Says Deadly Incident At Astroworld Festival 'Devastated' Him