Police officers found that the accident was intentional. After the car was seized, a huge hole was formed in the upper corner of the house.
In the United States, a car flew into the air and crashed into a second-floor bedroom in a Pennsylvania home, where it remained hanging on Sunday afternoon until rescuers arrived.
Junction Fire Company personnel arrived at the scene of the accident on Alfarata Road in Decatur Township and found a Toyota Corolla stuck on the roof and in the attic.
Rescuers shared incredible photos of the accident and the gaping hole left in the side of the house. In one of the pictures, a car with Pennsylvania license plates hangs on the roof above the porch of the house, and its front end crashes into the sloping attic floor, where large wood chips are lying on the roof and lawn.
The photo from the inside shows the side of the car and the street where the wall used to be in the room covered with checkered wallpaper. The floor is covered with broken wood and other building materials, an old treadmill stands on it, and a bed is turned over on its side.
After the car was seized, a huge hole was formed in the upper corner of the house. Rescue crews stabilized the building to prevent it from collapsing further and helped the homeowners cover the hole with a tarp to prepare for the upcoming storm.
The driver got out of the car and was taken to the hospital, local TV channel ABC reported. None of the people in the house were injured. The fire department said that the car most likely hit a small culvert next to the driveway to the house, causing it to be thrown into the air.
The Pennsylvania State Police said that, according to its investigators, the accident was not accidental. State police officials reported that “the investigation determined that the accident was intentional, but no charges have been filed at this time.”