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Teen Who Stuck Head Out Window In Deadly Drug-Fueled Crash ID'd: PA State Police

A car full of teenagers supposedly on drugs and alcohol— one with his head out the window— crashed on Saturday, June 17, 2023, according to a Pennsylvania State Police release the following Tuesday.

Dillon Andrew Paul Fuller.

Dillon Andrew Paul Fuller.

Photo Credit: GoFundMe/Amber Shoop
The area where the deadly crash happened.

The area where the deadly crash happened.

Photo Credit: Google Maps (Satellite)

Dillon Andrew Paul Fuller of Duncannon has been identified as the 19-year-old passenger in the 2005 Chevrolet Malibu, who had with his head out of the window of the vehicle when it crashed, state police explained. 

Fuller was been driven by a 17-year-old Enola girl— and they were with another 17-year-old girl, a 15-year-old boy, and a 16-year-old girl, all also from Enola— during the crash around 10:30 p.m., according to the release.

They left the road and sideswiped a utility pole on New Bloomfield Road/State Route 274 near State Route 34 in Wheatfield Township, the police detailed. 

Fuller was in the rear-right window passenger seat with his head out of the window when they impacted the pole with the right side of the vehicle, according to the police. 

The driver stopped the vehicle when she saw Fuller had died, the police explained. 

The 15-year-old boy refused care for his minor injuries, but the girls were taken to Penn State Holy Spirit for their minor injuries, according to the release. 

The vehicle had only minor damage from the crash, as stated in the release.

"The driver (is) suspected of driving under a combination of drugs and alcohol," the police said. 

A blood draw was conducted and results are pending at the time of publishing. 

A charge of homicide by vehicle while driving under the influence is pending, according to state police. 

State police continue to investigate this deadly crash.

Dillon graduated from Cumberland-Perry AVTS two weeks before the crash, according to his family. He was hoping to become a machinist. 

"Dillon enjoyed life to the fullest. He loved to work on small engines, a craftsman with his forge, playing his guitar, hanging with his friends playing airsoft, fishing and hunting but most of all he loved spending time with his 3 younger siblings building Legos," the family wrote on a GoFundMe campaign.

Two GoFundMe campaigns have been started to help the family cover funeral costs. You can donate to them here and here.

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