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A car involved in a fatal crash Friday in Jessup was stolen just days prior in Prince George's County, police said. Howard County police said officers were called just after 3 p.m. Friday for a
crash involving four vehicles on Guilford Road near Twelve Sons Court and Mission Road. Police said a life was lost because four youths in a stolen car got impatient. "What happened first was this car that was stolen, occupied by juveniles, sideswiped a car trying to make a left, lost control, hit another car and then collided head-on with a car traveling the opposite way," Howard County police spokesman Seth Hoffman told 11 News. Police have preliminary information about what happened based on evidence at the scene. "One of the vehicles had a dashcam, so we were able to see what happened, what transpired exactly that helped us piece together some things," Hoffman told 11 News. The driver of the car that was struck head-on. Bonnie Fuller Griffith, 69, of Columbia, was taken to Howard County General Hospital, where she died. The impact of the collision sent pieces of Griffith's car in almost every direction. SkyTeam 11 video shows the stolen car ended up in a ditch against a tree, and the other vehicles sustained extensive damage. Crash investigators checked the license plates on the suspect vehicle and discovered that the car was reported stolen out of District Heights six days prior. Police report that the four youths ran away, and one of them, a 16-year-old boy, was injured in the crash and remains hospitalized. Police have been unable to talk to the injured teen because of his injuries. The three others remain at large. As of Monday afternoon, no charges have been filed and no one else was injured, police said. "It takes a while for investigators to piece together everything that happened," Hoffman told 11 News. "We are still trying to determine who the driver of this stolen vehicle was, as well. There are a lot of moving parts to this traffic collision." Michael Khoury, who lives across from Griffith, told 11 News she has lived in Columbia for a long time. "I think it is a real tragedy," Khoury told 11 News. "She was a nice lady. She was somebody who didn't do any harm to anybody. She was not somebody who got involved in other people's business. She was just a very nice person. We always said hello. She seemed to be somebody who was concerned about her neighbors." Police said Guilford Road was closed at Mission Road for about four hours. "It's terrible. It's another example of juveniles not being held accountable for what they do and the perception that juveniles have that they can do whatever they want without being held accountable," Khoury told 11 News. Griffith is survived by a daughter, neighbors told 11 News.