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Entire Family Killed in Va. Bus Crash Was Headed to Wedding

Family of 4 among the 5 killed in Virginia early Friday
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jun 1, 2026 1:30 AM CDT
Entire Family Killed in Va. Bus Crash Was Headed to Wedding
This photo provided by the Virginia State Police, shows the scene of a fatal accident involving a bus on Interstate 95 near Quantico, Va., on Friday, May 29, 2026.   (Virginia State Police via AP)

A family of four from Massachusetts who were killed when a bus crashed into multiple vehicles in Virginia were traveling to a wedding with a carload of homemade desserts for the celebration, the AP reports. The family wedding will go forward Sunday in South Carolina, but it also will be a time to mourn the loss of Dmitri and Ecaterina Doncev and their two children, Emily and Mark, a relative said Saturday. "A son, a father—the whole family—everyone that has been dear to us," Carolina Bublik said. The Doncevs were killed when a motorcoach caused a chain-reaction crash with vehicles that had slowed down for a work zone on Interstate 95 in Stafford County around 2:35am Friday, authorities said. Dmitri and brother Iuri tried to stay together while traveling in separate vehicles to South Carolina. "At some point they ended up getting separated," Bublik said. "Dmitri said, 'You go ahead. I'll catch up later.'"

The bus struck a Suburban, which then hit an Acura carrying the Doncev family, police said. Priscilla Mafalda, 25, of Worcester, Massachusetts, was in the Chevrolet SUV and also died. More people were treated for injuries, including one who was in critical condition, though most were discharged, Mary Washington Healthcare said. The bus driver, Jing S. Dong, 48, of Staten Island, New York, was charged with two counts of involuntary manslaughter, and additional charges were likely, Virginia State Police said. The prosecutor's office in Stafford County said Dong was arrested and would be in custody while he is treated for his injuries at a hospital. The bus, which was taking people from New York to North Carolina, was operated by E&P Travel Inc., based in Kings Mountain, North Carolina.

Prosecutors said in a statement that Dong's first court appearance will not be scheduled until he is discharged but a magistrate approved holding him without bond until that time. It also said prosecutors saw enough probable cause to believe Dong was "driving in a criminally negligent manner." The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the crash, a monthslong task separate from the work of state police. NTSB board member Tom Chapman revealed few new details but said the bus was moving at a high rate of speed. "It seems fairly clear that if there was any braking there wasn't much, because of the speed and severity of the collision," Chapman said.

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