Showing posts with label ACCIDENT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ACCIDENT. Show all posts

Friday, December 25, 2009

Traffic accident sends truck crashing into Ohio church's live nativity scene, killing man



By Associated Press

December 25, 2009 9:11 p.m.


ASHTABULA, Ohio (AP) — A retired fire chief performing in a live nativity scene outside a northeast Ohio church assisted injured spectators after a pickup truck crashed into the small audience, killing one person.

Former Ashtabula Fire Chief Norman Jepson, dressed as one of the Three Wise Men, said he checked the injured and called for help. Several ambulances responded.

As many as six people may have been injured in the Wednesday night accident outside Trinity Presbyterian Church, said Ronald Kaydo, a police sergeant in Ashtabula, a city of about 21,000 residents on Lake Erie's coastline.

Jepson said a car struck a pickup truck and the truck crashed into people watching the performance, pinning a 57-year-old man against a utility pole. That man died later at a hospital in Cleveland, about an hour southwest of Ashtabula.

Jepson said his back was to the audience when he heard a bang, which he thought was a fender-bender. But within moments, a truck was on the sidewalk, he said.

"I started seeing people flying through the air," Jepson said. "Four were in the air, but one was a woman who received a glancing blow and refused treatment."

Jepson said Friday the accident has been very unsettling for members of his church.

Police are investigating the accident.

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Information from: The Star-Beacon, http://www.starbeacon.com
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Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/wire/sns-ap-us-nativity-scene-crash-death,0,5419120.story

Saturday, November 21, 2009

China mine explosion kills 42, traps 66

Sat Nov 21, 2009 6:45am EST


(Changes byline, updates with latest toll)

* Blast shook the surrounding area, damaged buildings

* Chinese mines the deadliest in the world



By Maxim Duncan

HARBIN, Nov 21 (Reuters) - A gas explosion killed 42 miners in a Chinese mine on Saturday and 66 remain trapped hundreds of metres (yards) underground after the latest accident to hit the world's deadliest mining industry, state media said.

The blast ripped through the mine at about 2.30 a.m. when there were 528 people at work, but more than 400 have now got out safely, the official Xinhua news agency said, citing rescue team spokesman Zhang Jinguang.

The blast was so violent it shook the surrounding area. Buildings near the mine mouth have partially collapsed, and some survivors were knocked unconscious temporarily.

"I passed out for a while. I found I was shrouded by heavy smoke, when I regained consciousness. I groped my way out in the dark," 27 year-old electrician Wang Xingang told Xinhua.

Wang is in hospital with 28 others who escaped the mine, said Pan Xiaowen, deputy director of the Hegang Mining Bureau Hospital. Six of them are seriously injured.

The Xinxing mine is in Heilongjiang province, which borders Russia. It is owned by the Heilongjiang Longmei Mining Holding Group, and produces 12 million tonnes of coal a year, Xinhua said, making it larger than most mines where accidents occur.

Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang is heading to the site of the accident, and Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have given instructions about the rescue work, a sign of official concern about the latest in a long string of disasters.

Rescue teams are on site, with 156 people hunting for the missing miners, state television said.

Lax safety standards and strong demand for resources have made China's mines the deadliest in the world, despite a government drive to clamp down on the tiny, unsafe operations where most accidents occur.

More than 3,000 people died in mine floods, explosions, collapses and other accidents in 2008. (Reporting by Emma Graham-Harrison; Editing by Matthew Jones).


Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSPEK305119

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Saturday, October 31, 2009

Bus Carrying College Band Overturns in Georgia

Saturday, October 31, 2009




Fox News Channel
Oct. 31: Charter bus carrying 42 members of the Morehouse College marching band tipped over after it skidded off Interstate 75.

ATLANTA — Police say a charter bus carrying 42 members of the Morehouse College marching band tipped over after it skidded off Interstate 75, injuring several students on their way to a football game.

Henry County police Capt. Jason Bolton says the bus landed on its side in a ditch around 10 a.m. Saturday. Bolton said the driver lost control while trying to avoid another vehicle that was moving into his lane.

Bolton says 13 band members were taken to area hospitals in ambulances with non-life-threatening injuries. The other 29 were also taken to hospitals as a precaution.

The bus was one of three chartered by Morehouse to go to Albany State University for a football game.

Roads were wet from rainy conditions, and Bolton says weather was likely a contributing factor in the accident.
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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Japanese Destroyer Slams Into Ship

By MARI YAMAGUCHI,
AP
9 HOURS 37 MINUTES AGO


TOKYO (Oct. 27) - A Japanese navy destroyer and a South Korean container ship collided Tuesday off southern Japan, sparking fires on both ships and injuring three crew members, officials said.

The ships collided under a bridge linking the Japanese main islands of Kyushu and Honshu in the narrow Kanmon Strait, Japan Coast Guard spokesman Seishi Izumi said.

One crew member on the destroyer JS Kurama was slightly injured with scratches and bruises while two others were suffering from smoke inhalation, a Defense Ministry spokesman said on condition of anonymity, citing policy.

None of the South Korean ship's 16 crew members — 12 from South Korea and four from Myanmar — was injured, Izumi said.

The fire on the 7,400-ton container ship Carina Star was extinguished shortly after the collision. The blaze on the destroyer was mostly under control late Tuesday but its temperature was still extremely high, the defense official said.

Officials are investigating the case as possible professional negligence and have begun questioning crew members on both ships, Izumi said.

The defense official said the Japanese ship's bow was badly burned and mangled, but the vessel was still capable of traveling on its own. The container ship's hull was grazed near its bow.

TV footage showed orange flames shooting from the vessels in the dark.

Izumi said the fire apparently broke out as a result of the impact of the collision, with paint inside a storage room on the destroyer catching fire.

The accident occurred under the Kanmon Bridge connecting Kyushu and the western end of Honshu — the narrowest part of the strait — about 530 miles (850 kilometers) southwest of Tokyo, Izumi said.

All sea traffic in the strait was suspended for about four hours after the accident.

The Kurama, carrying 360 sailors, was on its way to its home port of Sasebo on Kyushu after serving as the flagship for the country's triennial fleet review Sunday at the port of Yokosuka. The container ship had left the South Korean port of Busan and was headed to Osaka in western Japan.
Last year, a collision between a destroyer and a tuna trawler off the coast of Chiba, near Tokyo, left two fishermen dead. That accident triggered an uproar in Japan, where many people harbor pacifist sentiments and remain sensitive to anything related to the military.

Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa quickly held a news conference to express regret.

"We deeply apologize to the people for causing concerns," he said. "We will quickly find out what caused the accident."


2009-10-27 12:53:46


Source: http://news.aol.com/article/japanese-warship-collides-with-south/738120?icid=mainhtmlws-main-ndl1link2http%3A%2F%2Fnews.aol.com%2Farticle%2Fjapanese-warship-collides-with-south%2F738120

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Tuesday, October 27, 2009

San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge to be closed


The Associated Press
Posted: 10/27/2009 07:02:20 PM PDT
Updated: 10/27/2009 07:23:38 PM PDT


SAN FRANCISCO—Authorities are closing down both directions of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge after a cable snapped on the upper deck of the span.
California Highway Patrol Officer Peter Van Eckhardt says the bridge will be closed for at least 24 hours so crews can try to repair the cable that snapped during the evening commute.

Van Eckhardt says the closure comes after a cable and a large piece of metal fell onto the westbound direction of the roadway about around 5:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Before the closure, traffic was already backed up into Oakland.

One person was shaken up and at last one vehicle damaged in the incident.

The cable snapped near the same section of bridge that was the scene of a big rig crash earlier this month.


Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_13655040
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Saturday, October 24, 2009

Puerto Rico firefighters work to contain massive fuel blaze

October 24, 2009 -- Updated 1151 GMT (1951 HKT)


Officials have warned residents to stay away from the fuel storage fire blazing in Puerto Rico.


(CNN) -- The massive clouds of black smoke reminded Carlos Salgado of the horrifying television images he'd seen of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.

That's how powerful the explosion was at a fuel storage complex in Puerto Rico on Friday. It shook the ground with the force of a 2.8-magnitude earthquake, shattering windows and doors and sending panic through the streets.

Early Saturday morning, 24 hours after the blaze erupted, Salgado stood on the balcony of his San Juan home, about 10 miles from the blast site, and could still see fireballs illuminate the night sky from his home.

"I've never seen anything like this in Puerto Rico," said Salgado, the legal counsel for the emergency corps that manages ambulances on the Caribbean island.

He could still hear explosions, and acrid air burned his nostrils as winds shifted westward, carrying the toxic smoke over populated areas of the island.

Firefighters were working around the clock, battling to contain the raging blaze. A cause for the blast has not been determined. Officials said they plan to investigate.

The scope of environmental damage is also not known.

Officials are concerned that expected precipitation Saturday mixed with the smoke could lead to acid rain. Authorities urged residents not to venture outside and to bring in their animals during the rain.


At least 15 of the 40 tanks at the Caribbean Petroleum Corp. facility in the municipality of Catano were still burning, Gov. Luis Fortuno said at a Friday evening news conference. The governor had put the tally at 11 a few hours earlier, indicating that the fire was still spreading.

The blaze erupted shortly after midnight Friday, when at least one fuel tank exploded. Residents described a surreal scene after the blast woke them.

"I was in bed and all of a sudden heard this really horrible sound, so I ran upstairs and thought the whole town had blown up," said Teo Freytes, who filed an iReport for CNN.

Others also woke Friday morning to an extremely unusual sight.

"I didn't expect to see a mushroom cloud from my house," said Justin Gehrke, a U.S. Army civilian employee who also filed an iReport.

Fortuno said he declared a state of emergency for the area so Puerto Rico can get aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

The storage and refinery complex sits near San Juan's bay, and Fortuno said officials are working to protect the water from being affected.

"We have serious worries that the bay or other bodies of water could be contaminated," he said.

Caribbean Petroleum's Web site says the complex has storage facilities for gasoline and gasoline-related products.

"We have been monitoring the water visually, and we have installed preventive pads and other material to contain a spill," said Pedro Nieves, chairman of the Puerto Rico Environmental Quality Board. "No oil has reached the water."

But Nieves said that Caribbean Petroleum has a history of spills and that "there was potential that it had contaminated ground water."

iReport.com: See, share, send images of the explosion

Newspaper and TV reports said a 4-inch pipe from a lagoon on the complex was broken, preventing firefighters from using 2 million gallons of water from the lake to battle the blaze. About 150 area firefighters and 215 National Guard personnel were battling to keep the blaze from spreading.

One person suffered smoke inhalation and was taken to a hospital, Fortuno said. At least 350 people were evacuated to a nearby stadium.

The smoke can be toxic for people with breathing conditions, and officials have asked nearby residents to stay away, the governor said.

"This is a tremendous amount of smoke, and fire contains all kinds of irritants, and this is oil that is burning," said Mary Mears, spokeswoman for the Environmental Protection Agency region that includes Puerto Rico. "It's smoke, so you're going to notice coughing, tearing, maybe a sore throat."

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms sent a team of fire investigators but has to determine whether the fire was an accident or set deliberately, said Orlando Felix, ATF resident agent in charge of the office in Puerto Rico. Federal agencies have jurisdiction over Puerto Rico, which is a commonwealth of the United States.

The FBI confirmed it is investigating graffiti found on two San Juan tunnels that referred to a fire. A spray-painted message on the two tunnels, less than 3 miles apart, said: "Boom, fire, RIP, Gulf, Soul, ACNF."

Rodriguez and San Juan police spokeswoman Maria Del Pilar Bon said they did not know what or who ACNF is. But Caribbean Petroleum owns the Gulf Oil brand in Puerto Rico.

"There could be many reasons [for the fire]," Fortuno said. "We're not going to guess. But there has to be an investigation."

Caribbean Petroleum spokeswoman Frances Rios said five employees were at the facility at the time of the explosion but declined to provide more information, El Nuevo Dia newspaper reported on its Web site.

Caribbean Petroleum, which owns 200 gas stations in Puerto Rico and several inland distribution facilities, supplies much of the island's fuel. But the governor said Puerto Rico has enough gas to last 24 days and 20 days' worth of diesel.

Department of Consumer Affairs Secretary Luis Rivera Marin said 16 million gallons of gasoline were in transit to the island. He also froze prices at the level they were at 8:06 a.m.

Officials transferred 295 inmates from a high-security prison in the area to other facilities, which they declined to identify for security purposes. Another 1,600 prisoners were moved from another nearby facility. About 200 extra prison officials were brought in to handle the transfers, Fortuno said.

Schools in Bayamon, San Juan, Toa Baja and Catano were closed, as were several roads.

CNN's Susan Candiotti, Jackie Castillo, Khadijah Rentas and Moni Basu contributed to this report.
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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Report: Girls in Crash Pleaded With Mom

Kayla Fernandez was critically injured after the car she was driving in flipped over at the hands of Carmen Huertas, her friend's mother, who was allegedly driving drunk.
CBS


Newspaper Says Drunk Driving Suspect Ignored Pleas From Daughter
AOL News
posted: 1 HOUR 15 MINUTES AGO

Oct. 13) -- Authorities said a mother who was the driver in a fatal crash in New York was drunk as she sped home after a Saturday night party with her daughter and six other girls in the car.
One of the surviving girls told her mother that Carmen Huertas, 31, ignored her own daughter's pleas to slow down before the car flipped over, killing 11-year-old Leandra Rosado, reported New York Daily News.

Leandra's best friend, Kayla Fernandez, 11, survived the crash after being thrown from the car. She is still hospitalized. Huertas' daughter, Brittany, 11, and the other four girls in the car were injured but expected to recover.

Kayla's mother, Melody Sanchez, said her daughter told her that Huertas told the girls, "'You think this is fast? Just wait until we get on the highway.'"

"I'm just shocked at what she did," Sanchez told the Daily News. "This is my daughter's life!"

Huertas had a blood-alcohol level of 0.132, the paper reported. The legal limit is 0.08. She was charged with vehicular manslaughter and driving while intoxicated.

"It's not a mistake, it's not an accident; it's negligence," Lenny Rosado, Leandra's father, told the Daily News. "Are you a child or are you an adult?"

2009 AOL LLC. All Rights Reserved.

2009-10-13 09:41:15


Source: http://news.aol.com/article/girls-reportedly-pleaded-with-carmen/715263?icid=mainhtmlws-maindl1link3http%3A%2F%2Fnews.aol.com%2Farticle%2Fgirls-reportedly-pleaded-with-carmen%2F715263

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Bronx Woman Is Charged in Crash That Killed Girl, 11

By SIMON AKAM and COLIN MOYNIHAN
Published: October 11, 2009

An 11-year-old girl died after a car driven by the mother of one of her friends overturned on the Henry Hudson Parkway early Sunday, the police and the girl’s father said. The driver was later charged with vehicular manslaughter and drunken driving.



Leandra Rosado





The 11-year-old, Leandra Rosado, was one of seven girls crammed into a Mercury Sable whose driver, Carmen Huertas, 32, lost control at West 96th Street shortly before 1 a.m., according to the police.

The girls — all between the ages of 11 and 14 and many of them friends from Public School 11 in Chelsea — were on their way to Ms. Huertas’s home in the Bronx as part of a slumber party.

The other girls and Ms. Huertas were left with injuries that were not life-threatening, but Leandra was pronounced dead at St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center, a hospital spokeswoman said.

“My daughter was a bundle of joy; she wanted to be everyone’s friend,” Leandra’s father, Lenny Rosado, said Sunday morning.

He was standing on West 17th Street, as friends embraced him and offered their condolences.

“She loved attention, she loved dancing, she loved music,” added Mr. Rosado, a security manager at the Maritime Hotel in the meatpacking district. “She considered herself a diva. She was into fashion, art.”

Israel Soto’s 11-year-old daughter, Kayla Sanchez, was another of the youngsters in the car.

Mr. Soto, 40, who also lives in Chelsea, said Kayla was “pretty banged up,” suffering a broken arm and bruises. She was being treated at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell hospital.

“I’m basically still in shock,” Mr. Soto said. “How do you get in a car drunk with kids?”

A spokesman for Harlem Hospital Center said on Sunday that two victims from the accident were in stable condition there, while a spokeswoman for NewYork-Presbyterian said that two other passengers besides Kayla had been taken there.

The events leading to the accident, which happened as a slumber party spilled into its second night, began early in the weekend.

According to Mr. Rosado, his daughter left their apartment on Friday to visit Ms. Huertas’s daughter Brittany Gonzales, who lived nearby with her father and stepmother.

On the way, Ms. Huertas and Brittany pulled up and suggested that Leandra go with them to the Bronx.

“She wasn’t supposed to be there,” Mr. Rosado said. “She wasn’t invited, but Brittany wanted her to go.

“I spoke to the lady,” he added. “She told me she was taking the girls to a party planned weeks ago.”

On Saturday, Leandra returned to Chelsea to pick up a change of clothes. That night Mr. Rosado dropped her off at an apartment on West 20th Street about 8 p.m..

“I gave her money, and she hugged me and said, ‘I love you, Dad,’ ” he said Sunday morning, wiping away a tear.

Less than five hours after Leandra’s farewell to her father, Ms. Huertas and the girls headed back toward the Bronx.

Mr. Rosado said he had gone to work at the Maritime Hotel. About 2 a.m. he received a call that Leandra been involved in an accident.

Mr. Rosado says he wants to campaign for stricter penalties for drunken driving. “New York City, New York State, they need to get tough with this,” he said.
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Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/12/nyregion/12crash.html

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Thursday, September 10, 2009

Missing Link found in church


Missing Link found in church

A Catholic who believed his prayers were answered when he was rescued from a lift was killed when he went to church to give thanks and the stone altar fell on him.

Gunther Link, 45, died instantly as he was crushed under the ancient 860lb monument in the Weinhaus Church in Vienna, Austria.

Link's body was found by parishoners attending Mass the next day after he had been reported missing by his cousin.

Police spokesman Roman Hahslinger said: "He was a very religious man and had been scared when he was trapped in the lift and had prayed for release.

"A short while later he was pulled out of the elevator and he went straight to the church to thank God.

"He seems to have embraced a stone pillar on which the stone altar was perched and it fell on him, killing him instantly.

"We have found his fingerprints on the pillar. We are now investigating the case further."
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Saturday, August 08, 2009

Pilot dead and seven injured as a Bangkok Airways plane crashes into a control tower in Thailand

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tuesday, August 4th 2009, 9:44 AM

Getty

Rescue workers inspect a Bangkok Airways airliner after stormy weather forced the plane off the runway and into the control tower at Thailand’s Samui airport.
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BANGKOK — A passenger plane skidded off the runway and crashed into a building after landing on the Thai resort island of Samui on Tuesday, killing the chief pilot and injuring at least seven people including foreign tourists.
The Bangkok Airways flight landed in stormy weather and hit the airport's old air traffic control tower, which had been converted into a fire station, said Kanikka Kemawutanond, director-general of the Department of Civil Aviation. The co-pilot and six tourists were hurt.
"The heavy damage was at the front of the plane where the pilot was. It looks like he suffered from the impact," police Maj. Col. Sayan Sartsri said.
The co-pilot, who was stuck in the aircraft for more than two hours, was among the last evacuated from the stricken plane. Television footage showed rescue workers pulling him from the aircraft and into an ambulance on the runway.
Kannikka, who earlier reported that 34 people were injured, said only seven were hospitalized while others sustained bruises and shock.
Samui, located 298 miles (480 kilometers) south of Bangkok, is an island in the Gulf of Thailand popular with foreign tourists.
Puttipong Prasartthong-Osoth, managing director of Bangkok Airways, said the foreign passengers included nationals of Italy, Spain, Switzerland, France, Germany, Great Britain and Israel.
He said four passengers — two Britons, one Italian and one Swiss — suffered broken legs, while two other Britons suffered less severe injuries. The co-pilot also had leg injuries.
Kanikka said the ATR72-500 twin-turboprop had 68 passengers, two pilots and two crew members on board and was flying from Krabi, another popular resort area in southern Thailand.
"Initial reports indicated that the weather was bad with heavy rain and wind. We do not know what the pilot did or did not do that led to the incident at this point and I would rather not speculate," she said.
Puttipong said the chief pilot had 19 years of experience.
In 1990, a Bangkok Airways turboprop crashed into a coconut grove short of the airport during heavy rain, killing all 37 people on board.
The French-Italian manufactured ATR72 has been involved in a number of incidents in recent years.
One in South Korea skidded off the runway while landing at the resort island of Jeju in 2006, injuring six people. Two years earlier, an ATR72 of Thai Airways had to make an emergency evacuation of passengers when its front landing gear collapsed during a landing in northern Thailand.
A Cambodian airliner slipped off a runway and got stuck in the mud near the ancient temples of Angkor in 2001. And in 1994, a Chicago-bound American Eagle ATR-72 crashed in northern Indiana, killing all 68 people aboard.

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Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/us_world/2009/08/04/2009-08-04_pilot_dead_and_seven_injured_in_.html#ixzz0NcVY8HWF

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Helicopter, small plane collide, crash in Hudson River near Hoboken

BY Rich Schapiro, Wil Cruz and Alison Gendar DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS
Updated Saturday, August 8th 2009, 1:22 PM

http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2009/08/08/2009-08-08_helicopter_crash_near_new_jersey_.html#ixzz0NcUdXCLN



Coast guard vessels comb the Hudson River after a helicopter and small plane collided, then crashed near Hoboken Saturday.



A midair collision sent a small plane and a tourist helicopter spiraling into the Hudson River on Saturday, killing at least one person as witnesses watched in disbelief.

The victim's body was found in the water off 14th St. following the crash on a clear, sunny afternoon, police sources said.

Coast Guard ships, police divers and helicopters joined in the desperate hunt for survivors from the two downed aircraft.

There were five passengers and a pilot on the tour helicopter, operated by Liberty Helicopters, sources said. It was unclear how many people were aboard the Piper PA-32 plane.

"I heard a noise, looked up, and seen a small plane and a helicopter just going down," recounted eyewitness Richard Martyn, who watched the crash from a West Side bike path.

"It was like a muffled boom," he said. "I'm still shaking."

The single-engine plane was registered to a Pennsylvania company and departed from Teterboro Airport, a police source said.

The tower at Newark Airport reporting losing contact with the plane at noon over the Hudson, said Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Arlene Salac.

Witnesses said the plane's left wing clipped the chopper's rotor, sending both aircraft plunging into the Hudson.

Eyewitness Scott Reynolds, 42, said the helicopter seemed to explode after the collision above the New Jersey side of the river.

"There was a white puff," said the Florida tourist. "It looked like the rotors just exploded, like something hit him."

Vern Brownell, a private pilot from Hoboken, N.J., said there was a huge bang - "like a cannon" - before the helicopter and the plane dropped like stones into the river.

"I looked over and saw two aircrafts falling from the sky," he said.

The single-engine plane "lost its wing" in the crash, he said, before spiraling into the water.

Rescue ships responded quickly to the crash site, where rescue efforts were hampered by spilled fuel oil that turned the river even murkier.

The chopper's propeller separated from its body as the helicopter plunged into the water, according to one witness.

"I just looked up, and I saw parts of the propeller in the air," said eyewitness Alanna Duffy, 29. "They were mangled."

Ambulances, fire trucks and police vehicles sped to the scene just south of 14th St. near Pier 54.

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Tuesday, August 04, 2009

Wrong-Way Highway Driver Who Killed 8 Had 10 Drinks, Was High


Toxicology Report in Taconic Crash Shows Marijuana, Double Legal Limit of Alcohol
By LEE FERRANAug. 4, 2009


A New York mom had at least 10 drinks and smoked a large amount of marijuana before driving five children the wrong way down a highway and crashing head on into an SUV, investigators said today.

(ABC News)Diane Schuler, 36, was killed in the July 26 accident on New York's Taconic State Parkway along with her 2-year-old daughter and three nieces who were riding in her van, as well as three men who were in the SUV in the July 26 wreck. Her 5-year-old son was the lone survivor of the crash.

Schuler had a blood alcohol content of .19, more than double the legal limit, and was also "impaired by marijuana," according to a statement released by state attorney Janet Difiore citing a toxicology report by the Westchester County medical examiner.

Investigators could not determine if Schuler had been drinking while she was driving, but alcohol was in her stomach at the time of the autopsy and a bottle of vodka was found at the crash scene, New York State Police Major William Carey said at a press conference.

It was not clear exactly how much or when Schuler smoked marijuana, the toxicology reported "high" levels of THC, the active ingredient in pot, Westchester director of toxicology Betsy Spratt said.

But she had drank a lot.


"There were approximately 10 drinks still in her," Spratt said that had yet to be metabolized.

The combination of alcohol and marijuana "intensified" the effects of each, Spratt said.

"With that level of alcohol we talk in ranges. She would've had difficulty with perception, judgment and memory. Around that level you get tunnel vision," Spratt said.

Carey said, "There's no indication there will be any criminal charges forthcoming."

Police initially said they had no indication Schuler was impaired while driving, Carey said.

"We did not have people that morning describe Diane Schuler as anything other than to say she was fine," Carey said.

The crash was ruled a homicide last week before the toxicology report was completed, Westchester medical examiner Dr. Millard Hyland told ABCNews.com.

"It was ruled a homicide in terms of people being killed because she was driving in the wrong direction," Hyland said, and did not take toxicology into account.

The full report was completed Monday, Hyland said.

Roseann Guzzo, daughter of Michael Bastardi and Guy Bastardi, both crash victims, told New York's The Journal News that while the report explains the once mysterious accident, it does not justify it.

"This wasn't an act of God. This was her choice. She made the wrong choice," Guzzo said. "This isn't an accident. This is murder."

The co-owner of the upstate N.Y. campground said she knew Diane Schuler well and saw her off on the day of the accident.

"If she had alcohol on her breath, I sure didn't smell it," said Scott. "The last thing I said to her was 'have a safe trip home' and she said, 'We will' and that was the end of it.


Woman Takes Deadly Turn

Schuler was driving home from a New York campground on the Taconic State Parkway, a route she knew well, when she somehow ended up driving the wrong way in the fast lane into oncoming traffic.

During the drive, Schuler called her brother to tell him she wasn't feeling well. He asked her to pull over immediately. Schuler did not pull over, but her brother was worried enough to call the police.

Two hours after the call to her brother, police believe Schuler turned onto the parkway, heading down an exit ramp with signs clearly stating that she was heading the wrong way.

She drove in the fast lane, straight into traffic. Oncoming cars swerved to miss her.


Surviving Driver: She Was 'In Control'

One of the drivers in her path, Richard Rowe, managed to avoid a crash with Schuler who he said seemed "in total control."

"I don't understand. She was in total control of the car," Rowe said. "Maybe initially she was confused, but she had lots of time to correct her mistake. If we had been 30 seconds later, we would have been hit by her."

Three men in the SUV from Yonkers, N.Y., could not avoid Schuler. All three were killed in the head-on collision.
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Monday, July 27, 2009

Van Drove Wrong Way for 2 Miles Before Crash

Jonathan Fickies for The New York Times

The scene of a three-car crash on the Taconic State Parkway on Sunday in Briarcliff, N.Y.

By ANAHAD O’CONNOR and NATE SCHWEBER
Published: July 27, 2009

A Long Island woman driving a minivan that plowed into an S.U.V. Sunday afternoon in Westchester, killing eight people and injuring three, had been going in the wrong direction for nearly two miles before the collision, the State Police said Monday. Two hours before the accident, she had called her brother and told him she was not feeling well, the police said.
The driver, Diane Schuler, 36, of West Babylon, turned her Ford Windstar onto the northbound exit ramp of the Taconic Parkway on Pleasantville Road, near Mount Pleasant, on what was her left, but to drivers going the correct way, their right, the authorities said. She then crossed three lanes of traffic into the passing lane and headed south, swerving around oncoming cars for 1.7 miles before crashing into a Chevy Trailblazer carrying three men from Yonkers on their way to a family party in Yorktown, N.Y.

“To her, it would have seemed like she was in the right-hand lane,” said Captain Michael Realmuto of the State Police.

The minivan had been headed in the wrong direction long enough to prompt at least six drivers who passed her to call 911, the authorities said.

Ms. Schuler and four of the five children in her minivan were killed, along with the three men in the Trailblazer: a man, his son and their friend. As it spun out of control about 1:35 p.m., the minivan also collided with a third vehicle, leaving the driver and passenger with minor injuries.

At a news conference Monday afternoon, Captain Realmuto provided some insight into what may have affected Ms. Schuler’s judgment. Two hours before the accident, he said, she called her brother, Warren Hance of Floral Park, N.Y. — the father of three of the four girls who died — and said she was not feeling well. Mr. Hance told her to stay where she was so he could come get her, but she did not know where she was at the time she called him, Captain Realmuto said.

“She wasn’t real specific when she spoke to her brother,” Lt. James H. Murphy said. “She seemed a little disoriented. She didn’t know where she was when she spoke to him.”

Ms. Schuler, three young nieces and her daughter, 2, and son, 5, were apparently returning from a weekend camping trip in Monticello, N.Y. The police said that she had not been taking medication and had no history of medical problems that might have played a role in the crash.

“We do not know what caused the operator of the vehicle to travel the wrong way on the Taconic State Parkway,” Captain Realmuto said. “Accidents involving drivers going the wrong way on the parkway are rare.”

The scene of the crash was one of devastation. Investigators said Ms. Schuler and at least one child may have been ejected from the minivan. Because many of the car seats were burned in an ensuing fire, investigators were still trying to determine whether seatbelts had been used.

The State Police identified the dead as Ms. Schuler; her daughter, Erin Schuler, 2; and three nieces, Kate Hance, 5; Alison Hance, 7; and Emma Hance, 9. Her son, Brian, 5, was being treated at Westchester Medical Center in Valhalla, N.Y., for head trauma and was in critical condition.

The three who died in the Trailblazer were Michael Bastardi, 81; his son, Guy Bastardi, 49; and a friend, Daniel Longo, 74, who was in the back seat. The man and the woman in the other car that was hit — Angela M. Tallarico, 53 and her passenger, Dean Tallarico, 53 — were treated for minor injuries at Phelps Memorial Hospital Center in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y.

After crashing into the two vehicles, the minivan came to a stop on a grassy strip between the lanes of the parkway, where it burned to its frame.

The accident was the second on the Taconic on Sunday involving a vehicle traveling in the wrong direction. The Associated Press reported that five people were injured several hours earlier in an accident about 20 miles north of Mount Pleasant. On the same day, at 2 a.m., a man was arrested driving the wrong way on the Taconic, the police said. They said that he was drunk.
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Sunday, July 19, 2009

Kennedy's Chappaquiddick Marks 40th Anniversary

Photo(Courtesy) http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/the-other-president/article1223203/


Kennedy's Chappaquiddick Marks 40th Anniversary

Sunday, July 19, 2009 3:16 PM



The 40th anniversary of the darkest chapter in Sen. Ted Kennedy's life passed quietly over the weekend.

On July 18, 1969, a car driven by the Massachusetts Democrat veered off a bridge on Chappaquiddick Island and into the waters near Martha's Vineyard.

Kennedy escaped the submerged car with minor injuries, but his traveling companion was not so lucky. Mary Jo Kopechne, 28, was trapped in the overturned vehicle and drowned.

Kennedy did not contact police until the next day. He later pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of an accident, and was given a two-month suspended jail sentence.

The ensuing scandal dogged Kennedy's presidential aspirations, and he never was able to capture his party's nomination.

Kennedy, now 77, has largely withdrawn from public life since he was diagnosed in May 2008 with a cancerous brain tumor.




Friday, July 17, 2009

Pope Slips and Breaks Right Wrist on Vacation

By RACHEL DONADIO
Published: July 17, 2009

ROME — Pope Benedict XVI fractured his right wrist in a fall early Friday morning while on vacation in northern Italy, the Vatican said. He was released from the hospital later in the day after undergoing successful surgery.

Related

Beliefs: From the Vatican, a Tough Read (July 18, 2009)
Times Topics: Pope Benedict XVI

Vatican officials were quick to defuse any alarm over the first medical intervention known to the public since Benedict, 82, became pope in 2005.

“It’s nothing serious,” the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said in a telephone interview. He said doctors had ruled out the possibility that Benedict had been ill before falling.
Doctors operated on the pope’s wrist for about 20 minutes, Reuters reported. Father Lombardi called the operation “not difficult.” He said doctors had inserted pins to help the wrist heal, using a local anesthetic.

He added that the pope would have to wear a cast for about a month. News reports showed Benedict leaving the clinic smiling and waving with his left hand.

In a statement released by the Vatican, the pope’s private physician, Dr. Patrizio Polisca, said that Benedict was “in good condition.”

The Vatican said that the pope had slipped overnight in his room in the chalet where he was staying in the mountainous Valle d’Aosta region.

Father Lombardi said that Dr. Polisca, who travels with the pope, was already in Valle d’Aosta when the pope fell and that he oversaw the local doctors who performed the operation.
In a statement, the Vatican said that Benedict was well enough to eat breakfast and celebrate Mass before being taken by car to the local hospital on Friday morning.

After meeting President Obama the previous Friday, the pope arrived on Monday in northwest Italy, where he is scheduled to remain on vacation until July 29. He is then expected to return to his summer residence at Castel Gandolfo outside Rome until September.

Father Lombardi said it remained to be seen whether the pope would keep his two scheduled commitments: delivering an Angelus message in two parishes near Aosta on the coming two Sundays.

In recent months, Benedict has appeared tired in some of his public appearances. But he has kept up a public schedule, including an eight-day trip to Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian territories in May.


Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/18/world/europe/18pope.html?bl&ex=1247976000&en=7d0339b05bc2733a&ei=5087%0A

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

168 killed in Iran plane crash


By ALI AKBAR DAREINI – 1 hour ago

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — A Russian-made Iranian passenger plane carrying 168 people crashed shortly after takeoff Wednesday, smashing into a field northwest of the capital and shattering into flaming pieces. All on board were killed in Iran's worst air disaster in six years, officials said.

Before crashing, the plane's tail was on fire as it circled in the air, one witness told The Associated Press.

"Then, I saw the plane crashing nose-down. It hit the ground causing a big explosion. The impact shook the ground like an earthquake. Then, plane pieces were scattered all over the agricultural fields," Ali Akbar Hashemi, a 23-year-old who was laying gas pipes in a nearby home, told AP by phone.

The impact blasted a deep trench in the dirt field, which was littered with smoking wreckage, body parts and personal items from the Tupolev jet, according to photos from the scene. Firefighters put out the flaming wreckage, which officials said was strewn over a 200 yard (meter) area. A large chunk of a wing was visible in footage of the scene, but much of the wreckage appeared to be in small shreds.

Iran has seen numerous crashes in recent years, usually blamed on poor maintenance. Iranian officials often blame U.S. sanctions that prevent it from updating American aircraft bought before the 1979 Islamic revolution and make it difficult to get European spare parts or planes as well.

Iranian airlines and the military have turned increasingly to Russian aircraft, which are not affected by sanctions, but have seen a string of accidents. Two other Tupolev crashes in Iran this decade have killed nearly 140 people.

The Caspian Airlines Tu-154M jet had taken off from Tehran's Imam Khomeini International Airport on Wednesday morning and was headed to the Armenian capital Yerevan. It crashed at 11:30 am about 16 minutes after takeoff near the village of Jannat Abad outside the city of Qazvin, around 75 miles northwest of Tehran, civil aviation spokesman Reza Jafarzadeh told state media.

At Yerevan's airport, Tina Karapetian, 45, said she had been waiting for her sister and the sister's 6- and 11-year-old sons, who were due on the flight. "What will I do without them?" she said, weeping, before she collapsed to the floor.

The cause of the crash was not immediately known. Hossein Ayaznia, an aviation police official, said emergency workers were searching for the plane's data recorders to get evidence of the cause.

Iran's Jafarzadeh and the deputy chairman of Armenia's civil aviation authority Arsen Pogosian said there were 153 passengers and 15 crewmembers on board the plane. "In all likelihood, all on board were killed," Pogosian told reporters at Yerevan airport.

Most of the passengers were Iranians, many of them from Iran's large ethnic Armenian community, along with six Armenian citizens and two Georgian citizens, Pogosian said. The two Georgians included a staffer from the Caucasus nation's embassy in Yerevan, Georgia's military attache in the Armenian capital said.

Serob Karapetian, the chief of Yerevan airport's aviation security service, said the plane may have attempted an emergency landing, but reports that it caught fire in the air were "only one version." He did not elaborate. A police official told Iran's semi-official ISNA news agency that several witnesses reported seeing the plane's tail on fire in the air as it circled to find a place to land.

The plane was completely destroyed in the crash and shattered to pieces, Qazvin emergency services director Hossein Behzadpour told the state news agency IRNA.

"The force of the crash was so serious that pieces of the aircraft were thrown over a 200 meter area. Unfortunately, all the bodies were totally destroyed," Behzadpour said.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad issued a statement expressing condolences "to the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamanei and the families of the dead" over what he called a "heart-wrenching tragedy" and ordered an investigation into the cause. Armenia's president, Serge Sarkisian, also expressed his condolences and declared Thursday a day of mourning.

Also among the passengers were eight members of Iran's national youth judo team, along with two trainers and a delegation chief, who were scheduled to train with the Armenian judo team before attending competitions in Hungary on Aug. 6, state TV said.

The crash is the worst since February 2003, when a Russian-made Ilyushin 76 carrying members of the elite Revolutionary Guards crashed in the mountains of southeastern Iran, killing 302 people aboard.

Caspian Airlines is an Iranian-Russian joint venture founded in 1993 whose fleet is made up of Tupolevs.

Soviet-built Tupolev and Antonov planes have long been the mainstays of the civil air fleets in Russia and former Soviet republics. Once considered reliable aircraft, the most widely used models — like the Tu-154 — have in recent years gone largely unmodified or updated by aircraft designers.

The Soviet collapse resulted in the sharp decline in government funding for aircraft spare parts manufacturers and for the aircraft manufactures themselves, and many airlines fell behind in maintenance programs for the planes.

Iran has about a dozen Soviet-built Tu-154 airliners. In 2006, Russia negotiated the sale of five Tu-204s to Iran.

In February 2006, a Russian-made Tu-154 operated by Iran Airtour, which is affiliated with Iran's national carrier, crashed during landing in Tehran, killing 29 of the 148 people on board. Another Airtour Tupolev crashed in 2002 in the mountains of western Iran, killing all 199 on board.

The crashes have also affected Iran's military. In December 2005, 115 people were killed when a pre-1979 U.S.-made C-130 plane, crashed into a 10-story building near Tehran's Mehrabad airport. In Nov. 2007, a Russian-made Iranian military plane crashed shortly after takeoff killing 36 Revolutionary Guards members.

AP writer Avet Demourian in Yerevan, Armenia, contributed to this report.
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Source: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i7qca3d8PElLgPytZU1tjeppF_SwD99EV8O82
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Thursday, July 02, 2009

Fingers pointed at Yemenia Airways after Airbus crash


Tuesday 30 June 2009

Relatives of passengers aboard Yemenia Airways flight IY 626 which crashed en route to the Comoros from Paris on Monday have criticised the airline for having a poor safety record. Out of 153 on board, a 14-year-old was rescued alive.


Tuesday 30 June 2009 By (text) / (video)

Paris airport emergency number for families of passengers: +33.(0)1.48.64.59.59 Yemenia Airways's call centre in Sanaa: +967.1.250.800/ emergency number: +967.1.250.833


A Yemenia Airbus 310-300 with 153 people on board crashed into the sea late Monday night while approaching the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Comoros. A 14-year-old girl is the sole survivor so far, according to the local Red Cross and rescuers.

Earlier reports had suggested the survivor was a five-year-old child.

Three bodies have been recovered, while the location of up to a hundred others has been identified by search and rescue personnel, according to authorities.

There were up to 66 French nationals on Yemenia flight IY 626, which originated from Paris. French authorities have also dispatched two airplanes and a ship from the Reunion islands to aid the search.

Contact with the flight was lost at 1:51 am local time (GMT+2), when the plane appears to have pulled off from its final approach to land for a second try. According to a senior Yemeni aviation official, Mohammad Abdel Kader, “the weather conditions were bad, with winds gusting up to 61 knots”.

Flight plan of Yemeni Airbus A310-300 that crashed off the Indian Ocean archipelago of Comoros on June 30 at around 1am Paris time
The Yemenia flight took off from Paris’ Charles de Gaulle airport, subsequently making stopovers in Marseilles and Djibouti, with a change of aircraft in Sanaa. The 143 passengers on board included nationals from France, Canada, Comoros, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Morocco, the Palestinian territories, the Philippines and Yemen.


Questions on safety record

The airport authorities cite bad weather at the time of the accident, and Yemenia’s deputy director assured FRANCE 24 that "the plane had taken off without any technical problem."

But the crashed aircraft had been cited for technical faults earlier, according to France’s transport minister Dominique Bussereau, and “banned” from French airspace. It was also an aircraft that did not belong to Yemenia, but it was owned by another company, the lessor International Lease Finance Corp.

"The Airbus A310 in question was checked in 2007 by the DGCA [France’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation], and they noticed a certain number of faults. The unit has since not reappeared in our country," Bussereau told TV channel I-Tele.

Relatives of passengers at the Charles de Gaulle airport also told FRANCE 24 correspondent Gulliver Cragg that the plane from Sanaa to Moroni was usually “in very poor condition” and badly maintained.

Also at the airport were activists from a group called "SOS voyage aux Comores" (SOS Comoros Travel) who said that they had already protested against conditions on the flights earlier.

"Flights between Sanaa and Moroni are carried out by cowboy operators," spokesman Farid Soilihi told AFP. "They treat people like cattle, they pile them in, they don't respect timetables, there are always technical problems."

Airbus and France’s Office of Investigations and Analysis (BEA) will be sending teams to the region to investigate the accident.

The European Commissioner for Transport, Antonio Tajani, has said that it would contact Yemenia to inquire on its safety record, and would also propose a “global blacklist” along the lines of EU’s current blacklist of banned airlines.
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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Feds criticized in wake of Metro crash


Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Aging cars need replacement, council member says
by C. Benjamin Ford and Janel Davis Staff Writers


This story was corrected on June 24, 2009. An explanation of the correction is at the end of the story.


While investigators combed through the wreckage of Monday's Metro crash, a Montgomery County Council member who also served as chairman of the regional Council of Governments ripped the federal government for failing to modernize the cash-strapped rail system.

Councilman Michael J. Knapp (D-Dist. 2) of Germantown, reading from a news story at a council meeting Tuesday morning, noted that the federal government — in this case the National Safety Transportation Board — had wanted to phase out the aging train cars involved in the crash, but that Metro had not heeded the cry.

"I appreciate the fact that the NTSB and the federal government said we had these recommendations, but the reality is over the years [regional governments and agencies] have worked on ways to secure adequate funding for Metro," said Knapp, who also chaired the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.

"The reality is that the participant who has not stepped up to the plate is the federal government."

The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority held a special board meeting Tuesday afternoon to discuss safety and security in the wake of the two-train crash that killed nine people, including a train operator, and injured more than 70 others.

Metro General Manager John Catoe said his "heart and soul" went out to the dead and injured and their families.

"My words cannot change what happened, but they can help change it from happening again," Catoe said. "Of course it was an accident, but this accident should not have happened."

The cause of the crash, the worst in the 33-year history of Metro, still was not determined. Investigators were looking at a range of possibilities, from signal relay problems that help run the automatic trains to operator error by the driver of the second train, to a combination of factors.

"Now is the time to act to find the root and the cause of this tragedy and correct it," Catoe said.

Immediately after Catoe spoke, the WMATA board went into closed executive session to discuss safety and security issues, but told reporters they expected to reconvene before 5 p.m. to take any action in public session.

The WMATA board already was scheduled to discuss $11 billion in unfunded capital improvement projects needed to make system improvements, said Metro spokeswoman Angela Gates.

A National Transportation Safety Board member pointed out that the board had recommended WMATA replace the fleet's oldest cars five years ago or retrofit it to better protect passengers in the event of a crash. The southbound train that crashed into the stopped train on the Red Line near Fort Totten station was one of the oldest models of subway cars.

"We recommended to either retrofit those cars or to phase them out of the fleet," said NTSB member Deborah Hersman at a press conference Tuesday. Metro officials "have not been able to do that and our recommendation was not addressed. So, it has been an unacceptable status."

Metro had planned to replace the aging cars with newer models, but retrofitting the cars was not shown to be feasible, spokeswoman Candace Smith said.

Metro's automated software system was designed to slow the train, but passengers reported that they did not hear the brakes engaged either by the computer or the operator, who can override the automated controls.

"They need to take a really hard look to see if the cause of this is the aging of the system, either the physical system or the computer system, or the software," said transit advocate Ben Ross, president of the Action Committee for Transit.

Alstom Signaling, which makes the relay signals that help control the trains, did not return calls for comment.

The incident signals the need not just to solve the problem that caused the crash, but to invest overall in the system, Knapp said.

The federal government still has not given a plan for an additional $150 million investment that it needs to make, Knapp said.

County Councilwoman Nancy Floreen called the crash "devastating" to the region's transportation reliability and, like Knapp, reiterated the need for more funding for the regional train system.

"This is a wake- up call to Metro," said Floreen (D-At large) of Garrett Park, who chairs the council's Transportation and Environment Committee. "They need to demonstrate to the region that people will be safe when they get on these trains. This is a system we all use. We're totally dependent on it."

But public transit experts said Metro and other systems are safe.

A 2008 National Safety Council study showed that subways and commuter railroads were the safest forms of transportation. There are 0.05 fatalities per 100 million passenger miles on trains compared with 0.71 fatalities in cars.

"Public transportation is one of the safest ways to travel," said Virginia Miller, a spokeswoman for the American Public Transit Association.

As word of the crash spread Monday, various agencies and emergency services within Montgomery County mobilized.

Holy Cross Hospital in Silver Spring received seven crash patients, all of whom were treated for "various bumps and strains" and released Monday night, said Yolanda Gaskins, a spokeswoman for Holy Cross.

Washington Adventist Hospital in Takoma Park received five patients, one with non life-threatening injuries and four with minor injuries, said Lydia Parris, a Washington Adventist spokeswoman. All five patients have been released, Parris said.

"When something like that happens, management and the emergency room all work together to make sure we are ready for whatever comes our way," Gaskins said Tuesday. "We were all watching the news making sure that if we had additional patients we were ready."

Ronna Borenstein-Levy, a spokeswoman for Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, said two patients from the crash were taken to that hospital. One was treated and released, while a 17-year-old girl remains at the hospital in fair condition. Though far from the scene, the hospital prepared to take on more if necessary.

"We readied ourselves," she said. "We checked our bed situation, our supplies. We could've easily received more patients."

Among the dead identified by deadline were Mary Doolittle, 59, of Northwest Washington, D.C., Ana Fernandez, 40, of Hyattsville, Dennis Hawkins, 64, of Southeast Washington, D.C., Lavanda King, 23, of Northeast Washington, D.C. and train operator Jeanice McMillan, 42, of Springfield, Va.

Staff writers Jason Tomassini and Bradford Pearson contributed to this report.

-Metro officials said they did not know Tuesday when the Red Line would resume normal operations and recommended that commuters check online at www.wmata.com for the latest updates.

-Shuttle buses are being made available to help commuters between the closed stations.

-Service on MARC's Brunswick Line, which runs parallel to the Metro line near the crash scene, was suspended Monday evening and all day Tuesday, but was expected to resume this morning, MARC officials said.

Washington Post coverage: Train Operator Apparently Hit Brakes Before Crash
Washington Post coverage: Rescuers 'Tried Everything We Could'


Correction: Councilman Michael J. Knapp was incorrectly referred to as the chairman of the Council of Governments. He's the former chairman.


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Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Sotomayor breaks ankle at New York City airport en route to Washington for Senate meetings


Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor, wearing a cast on her right foot, meets with Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., not in picture, Monday, June 8, 2009, on Capitol Hill, in Washington, Sotomayor broke her... (Associated Press)


Sotomayor limps to Senate visits on broken ankle

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

Associated Press Jun 8, 09 6:04 PM CDT in Politics

Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor hobbled through a packed day of meetings on Capitol Hill Monday after breaking her ankle in an early morning airport stumble, then boarding a flight from New York to Washington to visit senators who will vote on her confirmation.


The federal appeals court judge, who has been keeping a busy set of appointments with lawmakers, tripped while rushing for her plane at New York's LaGuardia Airport. The White House said she suffered a small fracture to her right ankle.

Sotomayor made the meetings with senators despite her injury. She entered the Capitol for a meeting with Sen. Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, on crutches, wearing a white cast covered at the foot with a black soft bootie. Asked how she was feeling, Sotomayor said, "I feel fine, thank you."

The injury changed the tone slightly on an otherwise high-intensity round of meetings that are part job interview for Sotomayor, part preview of a pressure-filled set of confirmation hearings.

Sen. Mary L. Landrieu, D-La., signed Sotomayor's cast during their session. Her fellow Louisianan, Republican Sen. David Vitter, had a bag of ice and a pillow on hand when the judge arrived at his office, telling her to "please be seated and relax."

"I hope you all note that some Republicans are empathetic too," Vitter quipped to reporters. It was a humorous reference to President Barack Obama's remark that he wanted a Supreme Court justice with "the quality of empathy" _ a concept that has been roundly criticized by conservatives who counter that personal feelings and experiences have no place in a judge's decisions.

Sotomayor chuckled at the comment. "Oh I'm so grateful. Thank you, sir," she told Vitter.

Still, Vitter emerged from the meeting saying he still had "very serious concerns" about Sotomayor, including her position on the Second Amendment that gives Americans gun rights and her much-discussed comment in a 2001 speech that she hoped a "wise Latina" would usually make better decisions than a white male without that experience.

Vitter said he questioned Sotomayor "at great length" about the remark, which she repeated with almost identical wording in at least two subsequent speeches, and which she had the chance to look over while preparing a written version that later appeared in a journal.

"I think that's very different from an offhand comment which was ill-advised in terms of wording," Vitter said.

The White House, which initially said the "wise Latina" comment was a poor choice of words, scrambled Monday to explain what Sotomayor meant by it.

"If you go back and look at each of the instances, I think the overall theme is that experiences and background matter, and that what we've talked about in 2001 was a poor choice of words," said Robert Gibbs, the White House spokesman. He said he couldn't recall whether he knew the judge had uttered almost precisely the same words on multiple occasions when he said on May 29 that it was a poor word choice. Obama also said at the time that he was "sure she would have restated it."

Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh ridiculed Sotomayor on the subject and on her injury during his program Monday, saying, "I hope she can find a wise Latina doctor to set that ankle as opposed to an average white doctor, because the wise Latina doctor has much richer experience with broken ankles, and would probably do a much better job of setting that ankle than an average white doctor who has not lived the rich experiences of a Latina med student."

Sotomayor has set a relentless pace since her Capitol Hill debut last week, meeting with one-third of the Senate in just four days of visits.

The White House is pressing for her quick confirmation, and Sotomayor wasn't pausing much for distractions, even her own trip-up. After her arrival in Washington, she went straight to the White House, where a physician examined her and sent her to a local medical office for an X-ray.

The George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates treated and released her, according to a White House statement. She'll likely be limping through most of her confirmation process; Sotomayor said she would be in the hard cast for three weeks and a lighter one for three weeks after that.

Sotomayor drew praise Monday from former first lady Laura Bush, who said she was pleased Obama had nominated a woman for the Supreme Court.

"I think she sounds like a very interesting and good nominee," Bush said of Sotomayor. She said on ABC's "Good Morning America" that, "as a woman, I'm proud that there might be another woman on the court. I wish her well."

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Associated Press writers Ann Sanner and Ben Feller contributed to this report.

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P.S. 'dito, it hurt?
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