More than 100 tow trucks ride in honour of Hamilton driver crushed to death by car

Peter Szymczak was a 30-year-old father of three. His first ever truck was featured in the drive in his honour

Image | Tow truck funeral for driver crushed to death by car

Caption: Roughly 100 tow trucks drove, with their lights flashing, in honour of Peter Szymczak, a fellow driver, who died after a car hooked to his truck dropped and crushed him. (Andrew Collins/CBC)

At least 100 tow trucks slowly rolled through Hamilton with their lights flashing on Wednesday in honour of a 30-year-old Hamilton driver who died after being crushed by a vehicle hooked onto his truck.
Peter Szymczak, a husband and father of three, was working underneath the vehicle on April 6 in Ancaster, Ont., at roughly 2 p.m. when it dropped onto him.
Mark Green, one of his closest friends and boss at Fast and Friendly Roadside Services, called it a tragedy.
"It didn't need to happen this way … it breaks our heart," he told CBC News.
"He was the type of guy that if you were having a bad week and he was doing better, he'd make sure you got something hooked so you could feed your family."

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The "honour roll" as Green called it, featured tow trucks from around the region and also included the first truck Szymczak ever drove.
Justin Cassibo, Szymczak's co-worker, said at every ramp on the highway, more tow trucks were waiting to join.
"If he saw you on the highway broke down and you couldn't afford it, he would just tow you home for free because that was who he was," Cassibo said.
The tow truck drivers are trying to raise money for Szymczak's family, who set up a GoFundMe page(external link) to cover the funeral costs.