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Snack-packed truck stuck in Camden

Because the cargo was Frito-Lay chips, a tractor trailer got wedged in Camden overnight.

The math came up negative as this 13-foot-plus tractor-trailer rig got stuck underneath the 12-foot, 9-inch train trestle on Haddon Avenue in Camden. The independent trucker from San Bernadino, Calif., was carrying 7,000 pounds of Frito Lay snacks when the accident happened at 3:30 this morning.
The math came up negative as this 13-foot-plus tractor-trailer rig got stuck underneath the 12-foot, 9-inch train trestle on Haddon Avenue in Camden. The independent trucker from San Bernadino, Calif., was carrying 7,000 pounds of Frito Lay snacks when the accident happened at 3:30 this morning.Read moreCLEM MURRAY / Staff Photographer

Because the cargo was Frito-Lay chips, a tractor trailer got wedged in Camden overnight.

A heavier load, and the roof would not have gotten crunched, said driver-owner Javier Ocegueda this morning, standing on Haddon Avenue under a railroad trestle beside I-676. He and a friend were looking at the rig they drove all the way from San Bernadino, Calif.

Around 3:30 a.m., the 18-wheeler managed to squeeze under the trestle, winding up tilted, its top crushed.

None of the Doritos spilled, however.

Signs put the clearance at 12 feet, 9 inches.

This load needed an inch or two over 13 feet, Ocegueda said.

"It was dark so I didn't see the height," he said.

Another explanation: "The GPS told me to," he told an Inquirer photographer.

The trailer part actually belongs to a friend, who wanted to sell it for $5,000.

"Now I have to buy it, no matter what," said Ocegueda, who owns the cab, which says on its passenger side door, "Jesus Paid It All."

That spot snags a tractor trailer every couple of weeks, said a patrolman at the scene.

Usually, though, the driver is going slowly enough to stop when the initial contact happens, then backs out, he said.