Families in a ritzy Bay Area community say their lives have been torn apart by infighting and harassment following a fatal crash that killed four teenage best friends.
Elsa Laremont Stranczek, the 16-year-old daughter of a local teacher, was driving the vehicle in April last year when her Volkswagen Tiguan SUV veered off the road and into a tree, engulfing the occupants in a fireball.
Friends Olive Koren, 14, Sienna Katz, 15, Josalynn ‘Josy’ Osborn, 15, and Ada Kepley, 15, died in the crash. Stranczek and another passenger, Marley Barclay, 14, were severely injured.
Stranczek and Barclay claimed at the time that an oncoming driver swerved into their lane and forced them off the road near Woodacre, California. However, police said they found no evidence of another driver involved.
The teenage driver was subsequently charged with misdemeanor manslaughter in October, which sparked controversy in the wider Fairfax community.
Since then, Stranczek has become the subject of a lawsuit by one of the victims’ families and a petition to have her and her teacher mom removed from the school campus. They, in turn, unsuccessfully tried to get a restraining order against one of Osborn’s friends.
The victims’ parents are also split over the exact cause of the crash, with some blaming Stranczek, while others believe her and Barclay’s account.
Tensions flared further after Stranczek was released from the hospital, and she was accused of mocking Osborn’s love of wrestling by resharing a TikTok that reportedly called the sport ‘an excuse to touch people.’

An SUV, driven by Elsa Laremont Stranczek, smashed into a tree on April 18. She now faces charges in connection with the crash


Josalynn Osborn and Olive Koren were two of the passengers who lost their lives in the crash


Josalynn Osborn (top left), Olive Koren (top right), Ada Kepley (bottom left) and Sienna Katz lost their lives in the crash last April
Osborn’s mother, Christie Batanides, was among those questioning her version of events.
‘I knew she had to have been driving too fast,’ she told the San Francisco Chronicle in her first interview a year after the tragedy. ‘Cars don’t just burst into flames.’
Batanides said she was also infuriated by the young driver’s antics on social media over the summer.
Batanides said she had only met Stranczek a few times and was not aware that she was a learner driver who was not yet allowed to drive other youths without an adult in the car.
According to police, Stranczek was speeding in a 40mph zone when the crash occurred but had not been under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
They determined the proximate causes of the collision were speeding and unsafe turning movement and said the speedometer had ‘frozen’ at 65mph when the vehicle burst into flames.
Barclay told investigators that she recalled seeing headlights in front of the girls’ car moments before the crash, and said the last thing she remembered was Stranczek shrieking.
Stranczek has pleaded not guilty to the charge of misdemeanor manslaughter, which carries a maximum sentence of a year in detention.

Marley Barclay, 14, survived the crash, although she sustained critical injuries

Osborn with her mother, Christie Batanides, who says she has been haunted by the crash and has called for the young driver to face severe consequences

Osborn’s mother said her daughter was a big wrestling fan, and accused Stranczek of mocking her memory by sharing a TikTok after recovering in hospital that ridiculed the sport
But the girls’ families say the ongoing court case has plagued their lives in the year since the crash, as Batanides said she believes the police’s version of events.
She told the Chronicle that when she arrived at the crash scene, there were no skid marks on the road, and she believes the damage to the SUV could only have been caused by excessive speed.
But Gail Koren, the mother of Olive Koren, said she believes a reckless driver caused the girls to swerve off the road, saying: ‘I feel like someone is responsible for killing the girls, and it’s not [Stranczek].’
‘Is somebody getting away with murder?’ she questioned.
Linda Kepley, the mother of Ada Kepley, said she is concerned that investigators may have bungled the case, but felt that she will never know exactly what happened in the car.
She says she questions whether Stranczek may have accidentally hit the gas instead of the brake or if other girls in the car were distracting her.
‘If she was speeding, she’s a teenage girl, and kids speed,’ she said. ‘I’ve already made my peace with this. I think what people really need to do is to ask themselves, “Did I do that at that age?” We’re all human beings. We’re all flawed.’

Marley Barclay (left) originally told investigators they were run off the road in the crash that killed four, including Olive Koren (right)
Kepley added that she visited Stranczek in hospital before the teen was charged and said she came away believing that she ‘never wanted this to happen.’
The varying takes on the crash are indicative of the pain and trauma the crash continues to have on the affluent community, where many of the girls’ families had been longtime friends before their lives were torn apart.
The fractious fallout of the crash got so bad that, at one point, a petition was circulated to ban Stranczek and her mother, a teacher at the girls’ high school, from the campus.
Stranczek’s mother also unsuccessfully attempted to get a restraining order against one of Osborn’s friends after alleging that she was being harassed.
In February, Sienna Katz’s father, Rob, sued Stranczek and Marin County, accusing the county of creating a ‘dangerous condition’ on the road due to a lack of safety guardrails.
Attorneys for Stranczek and the county denied the allegations brought by Katz. Lawsuits have also been brought against the county by family members of victims Olive Koren and Josalynn Osborn, however those lawsuits did not name the driver.
‘In a small community like ours, connections run deep,’ Stephanie Hellman, the mayor of Fairfax, told the Chronicle, noting that many in their community have been touched by the tragedy.
After Stranczek posted the TikTok, a close friend of Osborn’s was hauled in front of a judge for sending a ‘hurtful’ message to her and her mother.
He claimed he sent the message because he found the video ‘exceedingly offensive.’
‘(Josy’s) spirit and memory was being trampled on,’ he reportedly told the court.

Gail Koren, the mother of Olive Koren, said she believes a reckless driver caused the girls to swerve off the road
Stranczek’s mother said her daughter had been flooded with hurtful messages about ‘killing’ her friends, saying she had been repeatedly attacked and threatened in the year since the crash.
‘I understand that people are grieving,’ she said. ‘But there is a difference between grief and sustained harassment.’
Barclay’s mother, Jessica Glantz-Mira, says her daughter has also been subjected to abuse for telling police about their car being ‘run off the road’ by another driver, as she has been accused of lying to protect Stranczek.
Glantz-Mira says she believes her daughter, saying, ‘It’s hard for me to picture someone going that fast on that road.
‘If she had been, Marley would have said something. She’s a scaredy-cat, but even if I were to find out [the driver] was speeding, I want to say that I’d still feel the same.’
Marin County District Attorney Lori Frugoli told the Chronicle that her office was focused on the legal process in the case, but understood that the crash was still an ’emotional situation for everyone involved.’
‘We understand that people may see this case differently, especially given the tragic circumstances,’ she said.
‘Our responsibility, however, is not to resolve public debate – it is to ensure that the legal process is fair, thorough and based on evidence.’


