MEMPHIS, Tenn. — One of the victims in Sunday’s deadly Hickory Hill crash was a 51-year-old woman who was just a few feet from her home, family says.
Lachell Boyd was turning into her subdivision, returning home after taking supplies to help a relative, when her car was hit around 8 p.m. on Hickory Hill Road near Sunny Morning Drive, the family said Tuesday.

Boyd operated a business that helped take care of senior citizens, the family said. She had been a teacher for 16 years at Sherwood Elementary and was instrumental in getting a playground.
She was described as extremely giving, always sharing and doing what she could for others.
Boyd and two other people were pronounced dead at the scene, while five others ranging in age from 10 to 23 were hospitalized.
In a new report WREG uncovered, officers listed the actions of the driver of the Infiniti SUV that collided with a Lexus as “aggressive driving, careless, reckless and the speed limit was exceeded.”
The 22-year-old driver was one of the crash’s fatalities.

Investigators said six vehicles left the crash scene before officers arrived. They released a photo (above) of possible witnesses.
The photo comes from a Skycop camera right outside of Jesus People Church and Worship Center.
The church said they paid for it several years ago and following Sunday night’s incident, they’re calling for more resources surrounding their building.
“This drag racing is not stopping and obviously, it took the lives of three people for us to realize that this is really getting tragic more and more by the day,” Kimberly Adams said.
Adams works at the church and said that she heard the wreck during Sunday night service.
She said when it happened, it was a peak time when drivers speed up and down the street. Particularly between Raines and Shelby Drive where she said races usually take place.
“Definitely as it gets darker – the five to eight o’clock hours – they’re definitely up and down this street,” Adams said.
Now, the church is calling for more cameras along the strip, speedbumps, more police patrols and anything else that can help prevent another tragedy.
“We just have to do something in the community and we need to do something as leaders in the community to help deter such bad behavior,” Adams said.
Shelby County Councilwoman Miska Clay Bibbs told WREG that she’d purchased over $260,000 worth of cameras that will be placed throughout District 11.
She said that the goal is to have them up throughout District 11 by early fall.
However, according to Arlenia Cole with the City of Memphis, speed humps are ineligible for Hickory Hill Road due to their “disruptive impact on emergency response vehicles.”
Cole said that recently installed speed feedback signs can help calm traffic for law-abiding drivers, but they are ineffective against drag racing and other reckless behaviors, which will require enforcement by the local police.
Police still have not said what led to the crash, but said an Infiniti SUV carrying 6 passengers was headed southbound on Hickory Hill Road when it struck the right front bumper of a Lexus turning onto Sunny Morning Drive.
In a newly obtained video by WREG, viewers can get a closer look at the tense moments following the crash.
In the video, a smoking car can be seen in the distance along with multiple cars sitting in the road.
If you have any information that could help police, call CrimeStoppers at 901-528-CASH.
51-year-old Terry Baggett and 22-year-old Antione T. Hampton also were killed in the crash.