MEC&F Expert Engineers

Sunday, August 20, 2017

DRUNKS/DRUGGIES DIE HARD: A wrong-way female driver killed and two other people were critically injured in a wrong-way crash on the Hutchinson River Parkway






SCARSDALE, N.Y. (CBSNewYork) — A woman was killed and two other people were badly hurt in a wrong-way crash on the Hutchinson River Parkway early Sunday.

As CBS2’s Brian Conybeare reported, police said as of last Sunday, it was too early to confirm whether drugs or alcohol were involved.

Following the crash, a mangled, twisted husk was all that was left of the gray sport-utility vehicle that Westchester County police confirmed was headed south in the northbound lanes of the Hutchinson Parkway early Sunday morning.

Police said the woman was driving a Kia Sorrento with a female passenger going the wrong way on the highway near the Weaver Street exit in Scarsdale around 4:30 a.m. when she collided head-on with a Land Rover heading northbound.

Responding units pronounced the driver dead at the scene. The passenger in the Sorrento was undergoing surgery late Sunday and remained in critical condition.

The driver of the Land Rover — a man in his 30’s — is in serious condition with non-life-threatening injuries.

A third vehicle – a black sedan – apparently swerved into the woods to avoid the smashed vehicles. The driver of the sedan was not hurt.

“I heard a horrible crash,” said one Scarsdale resident named Evan. “Within a minute or so after that, I heard a second really loud crash, and then I called 911.”

Evan said he was letting his dog out when he heard the impact. Investigators spent hours scouring the scene for evidence – taking measurements and trying to determine exactly how it happened.

Late Sunday, investigators did not know where the woman got on the parkway going the wrong direction.

There have been multiple wrong-way crashes on Westchester County roads in recent years, leading for some to call for increased signage and other safety improvements.

“Anything they can do to make the roads safer would be a great thing,” Evan said. “It’s a real tragedy what happened here last night.”

The northbound lanes of the Hutchinson River Parkway near Weaver Street in Scarsdale were back open early Sunday evening, after being closed for 11 hours. 


Most of the drunk-related crashes occur in the early a.m. hours, like this one.  Two females driving the wrong way at 4:00 am during the weekend provide plenty of support for the opinion that these two women were completely drunk.

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A driver heading in the wrong direction on the northbound Hutchinson River Parkway was killed in a head-on crash this morning, police said. Two others were injured.

A woman driving a 2014 Kia Sorento with Connecticut plates was driving southbound on the northbound side of the Hutch around 4:30 a.m. when her car crashed into a 2008 Land Rover, county police spokesman Kieran O'Leary said.




The scene from a crash on the Hutchinson Parkway northbound that occurred at 5 a.m. Sunday morning. As of 2 p.m., the road was still closed. (Photo: Carrie Yale/The Journal News)

The driver, who was found dead at the scene, hasn't been identified. A passenger in that vehicle, a woman in her late 30s, was in surgery at Westchester Medical Center as of 9 a.m., O'Leary said. She was listed in critical condition.

The driver of the Land Rover has "serious" injuries but they weren't expected to be life threatening, police said.

A 2012 Mercedes was also involved in the accident and had been driven off the road. It wasn't clear if the car had contact with the other vehicles or had swerved to avoid collision. The driver of the Mercedes, a 57-year-old man, declined medical treatment at the scene, police said.

At 8 a.m., the Kia faced traffic on the right side of the roadway and the Land Rover lay partially on the median in the middle of the parkway. The Mercedes was off the road to the right of the roadway.

Both lanes of the parkway were closed until almost 3 p.m. as Westchester County police investigated. All traffic was being sent off Exit 21.

DRUNKS/DRUGGIES DIE HARD: Wrong-way driver Michael Jones, of Port Richey killed when he crashed his Jeep SUV head-on into another SUV on the New Jersey Turnpike


MT. LAUREL, N.J. -- Authorities say a Florida man driving the wrong way on the New Jersey Turnpike was killed when his SUV crashed head-on into another vehicle.

State police say the crash happened around 11:30 p.m. Saturday in the Mount Laurel area. They say 21-year-old Michael Jones, of Port Richey, was traveling southbound in the northbound lanes when the accident occurred.

It's not yet known why Jones was traveling in the wrong direction or how far he had traveled that way before the crash.

Authorities say a 42-year-old man and a 32-year-old woman, both Jersey City residents, were in the other SUV. They were being treated for injuries that are not considered life-threatening, but further details haven't been released.

A stretch of the northbound lanes were closed for about an hour.


Most likely this dude was drunk or druggie.  So many of them come to NYC and NJ to sell drugs from Florida.  The jails are loaded with druggie Floridians.  It is also likely that he was drunk, as is often the case during the late pm and early am hours during the weekends. 



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Wrong-way driver killed in head-on wreck on NJ Turnpike, cops say

Updated on August 20, 2017 at 11:17 AM
By Bill Duhart



CHERRY HILL -- A 21-year-old Florida man died Saturday in a violent head-on collision on the New Jersey Turnpike when his Jeep SUV, traveling south in a northbound lane, smashed into another SUV, a state trooper said.

Michael Jones of Port Richey, Fla. was declared dead at the scene of the accident at mile post 33.2 here, Trooper Alejandro Goez said Sunday. The accident was reported at 11:30 p.m.

Jones allegedly smashed into a 2012 Hyundai Tucson driven by a 42-year-old man from Jersey City. He and his 32-year-old passenger, also of Jersey City, were taken by ambulance to Cooper University Hospital in Camden with non-life-threatening injuries, Goez said.

It was not immediately reported how Jones ended up traveling the wrong way on the turnpike, a toll road in which vehicles must travel through toll booths to enter.

The weather conditions were dry and clear. The northbound lanes were closed for an hour after the incident, Goez said. The accident remains under investigation.

YET ANOTHER NAVAL COLLISION INVOLVING US SHIPS: The USS John S McCain sustained damage to her port side aft after it collided with the Alnic MC, an oil and chemical tanker from Liberia, in waters near Singapore

SINGAPORE (WABC) -- A US Navy guided-missile destroyer and a merchant ship have collided in waters near Singapore, prompting a search-and-rescue operation and leaving the warship damaged, Pentagon officials said Sunday.

The number of possible injuries was unclear.

At the time of the incident, reported at 6:24 a.m. Saturday local time, the USS John S McCain was underway in the Strait of Malacca. The body of water separates the Malay Peninsula and the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

"Initial reports indicate John S. McCain sustained damage to her port side aft," the Navy's Seventh Fleet said in a statement. "Search and rescue efforts are underway in coordination with local authorities." 



Vessel ALNIC MC (IMO: 9396725, MMSI: 636017930) is a chemical/oil products tanker built in 2008 and currently sailing under the flag of Liberia. ALNIC MC has 183m length overall and beam of 32m. Her gross tonnage is 30040 tons.



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Search-and-rescue efforts are underway in the Pacific after a U.S. Navy destroyer collided with a merchant ship in the second such incident in two months, the service said.

The USS John S. McCain (DDG 56) collided with the Alnic MC, an oil and chemical tanker from Liberia, around 6:24 a.m. Monday in the South China Sea east of Singapore and the Strait of Malacca, according to a statement from 7th Fleet.

The incident, which occurred while the ship was headed for a port visit in Singapore, caused damage to the port side aft, or left back part, of the destroyer, the Navy said.

The extent of the search-and-rescue efforts wasn't immediately clear. The press release didn't indicate any casualties.

The accident comes just days after the Navy fired the top three officials from the USS Fitzgerald for their role in a deadly collision with a cargo ship on June 17 off the coast of Japan.

Cmdr. Bryce Benson, commander of the Fitzgerald, and Cmdr. Sean Babbitt, the executive officer, were "detached for cause," meaning the Navy "has lost trust and confidence in their ability to lead," the service announced Thursday.

In addition, the top enlisted sailor aboard the Fitzgerald, Chief Petty Officer Brice Baldwin, and several other sailors on the watch crew will face nonjudicial punishment for their role in the accident in which seven sailors drowned and others were injured.

The latest incident marks the fourth mishap involving U.S. ships in the Pacific this year, Fox News reported.

The USS Antietam, a Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser, ran aground and dumped oil in Tokyo Bay in January and the USS Lake Champlain hit a fishing boat in May, according to the network.



Overall, all these incidents show some very dismal competence level of the U.S. Navy.

Source: military.com


Christen Ebert, 26, Richard Chum, 30, Gary Sindhu, 29, and Kouang Saefong, 30, were killed after wrong-way driver Carlos Quinones, 19, collides his Jeep head-on with their Nissan on I-17 in Arizona


"Mudrun with my boys — with Richard Chum, Gary Sidhu and Danny Saetern."  Posting of Christen Ebert, 26, killed by wrong-way driver in Arizona

Christen Ebert, 26, Richard Chum, 30, Gary Sindhu, 29, and Kouang Saefong, 30, were killed after wrong-way driver Carlos Quinones, 19, collides his Jeep head-on with their Nissan on I-17 in Arizona





Victims of fatal I-17 wrong-way crash near Flagstaff identified
Christopher Mccrory, The Republic | azcentral.com
Updated 5:01 p.m. MT Aug. 19, 2017





The four victims of a fatal wrong-way collision early Friday on Interstate 17 south of Flagstaff have been identified.

Christen Ebert, 26, Richard Chum, 30, Gary Sindhu, 29, and Kouang Saefong, 30, were traveling north along I-17 south of Munds Park at approximately 4 a.m. when their Nissan collided with a Jeep that was driving the wrong way, according to the Arizona Department of Public Safety.

All four were declared dead at the scene.

Ebert and Chum were from Stockton, California. Sindhu was from Lodi, California, and Saefong was from San Francisco.

The driver of the Jeep, Carlos Quinones, 19, of Casa Grande, was injured and taken to Flagstaff Medical Center for treatment. The extent of his injuries has not been disclosed.

DPS officials said the investigation into the crash was ongoing.

The crash shut down I-17 for several hours, and backups lingered in the northbound lanes until late morning.



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Four people were killed in a wrong-way crash early Friday on Interstate 17 south of Flagstaff, the Arizona Department of Public Safety said.

The accident happened about 4 a.m., two miles south of Munds Park, DPS said.

A vehicle that was traveling south in the northbound lanes of I-17 crashed head-on with a second vehicle that was heading north, DPS said.

Four people in the second vehicle were pronounced dead at the scene, DPS said.

The driver of the wrong-way vehicle was injured and transported to a hospital. The extent of the driver's injuries was not available Friday evening.

DPS said late Friday the investigation was continuing.

The accident shut I-17 in the area for several hours, and backups lingered in the northbound lanes until late morning.

The Arizona Department of Transportation this week began installing a wrong-way detection system in the Phoenix area along I-17.

LIFE ECLIPSED: PILOT KILLED AFTER AN EXPERIMENTAL WHEELER EXPRESS PLANE CRASHED AND BURNED IN MADRAS, OREGON AS IT WAS ARRIVING TO WITNESS THE SOLAR ECLIPSE






The pilot of a small plane died Saturday afternoon when the plane crashed about a mile south of Madras Municipal Airport.(Jefferson County Sheriff's Office) 


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MADRAS, Ore. - (Update:Sheriff says only one person on plane, not two; comments from airport neighbor, young witness)

A pilot was killed in the crash of a small plane Saturday afternoon in the Willow Creek Canyon as it approached Madras Airport from the south, authorities said.


The plane, a single-engine, home-built Wheeler Express, was arriving at the Madras Airport when it crashed "under unknown circumstances" in Willow Creek Canyon around 1:50 p.m., Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor said.

Dispatchers with 911 notified Jefferson County sheriff's deputies of the crash shortly before 2 p.m., said Deputy Ron Larson.

Oregon State Police troopers and Jefferson County Fire and EMS also responded to the scene, about a mile south of the airport, Larson said.

They reached the plane from the south side of the canyon and found the plane engulfed in flames near the top of the canyon.

Officials at the Joint Information Coordination Center in Redmond said an area farmer was on scene fighting a fire on the plane when first responders arrived at the scene.




Officials initially had confirmed there were two people aboard the plane who did not survive the crash. But Sheriff Jim Adkins said late Saturday night that was in error, and only person, the pilot, was on it.

While the name of the victim has not been released, San Francisco TV station KPIX reports the plane was registered to a Menlo Park, California man and took off from the San Carlos airport around 11 a.m. NBC Bay Area said an employee at that airport confirmed the plane left the San Francisco peninsula city earlier in the day.

Officials said the plane was one of about 400 due to fly into Madras for the eclipse, so many that the airport, which usually operates without a tower, brought in a mobile one.

The sheriff's office confirmed the pilot was in contact with air traffic control and was on final approach.

The small brushfire sparked by the crash was being mopped up and is no longer a threat to the area, Larson said, adding that no other property was damaged.

Jim Spencer lives just south of the airport and is used to the sounds. He was in his backyard, entertaining family in town for the eclipse.

As another plane soared overhead later, on its way to a landing, Spencer said the approach "pretty much lines up with my driveway. So they're nice and quiet. But when you hear one go, 'brrp, brrp, broop,' you know, and it (the engine) cuts out - it just caught my attention. Five, six minutes later, we heard all these emergency sirens."



And Spencer also saw "a huge column of black smoke. And I knew -- that guy crashed his plane. And it was just - I figured it was somebody coming for the eclipse, you know -- likes flying. And then -- tragedy, you know. I felt sick."

The plane hit the south side of the canyon, sparking a brushfire.

"It kind of nosed in and it got lower," said Diego Lopez, a young witness. "I thought it was going to land right there," he said, pointing to a grassy field.

"I yelled, 'A plane just crashed! A plane just crashed.," he said. "It was crazy."

The FAA and National Transportation Safety Board was advised and are investigating, the deputy said.

Jefferson County Sheriff Jim Adkins, who is a pilot, said he didn't expect such a tragedy, even with the increase in traffic related to the eclipse.

"I've flown out of this airport myself for the last 25 years, and it's a very safe airport," Adkins told NewsChannel 21. "And the way that they have security and air traffic control today for this big event, the big eclipse event, I am a bit surprised that that this happened."




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Updated on August 19, 2017 at 10:06 PM
By Carli Brosseau

The Oregonian/OregonLive

This post has been updated.

The pilot of a small airplane died in a crash near Madras Municipal Airport early Saturday afternoon, Jefferson County Sheriff Jim Adkins said.

The plane crashed just before 2 p.m. in a steep and remote area about one mile south of the airport's runway, said Lisa Goodman, a spokeswoman for the Central Oregon Joint Information Center.

When first-responders arrived at the scene of the crash, near the top of Willow Creek Canyon, the plane was engulfed in flames, with a local farmer trying to put out the fire, Goodman said.

The Bend Bulletin has obtained aerial video footage of the scene, shown below.

The plane was approaching the airport when it crashed, said Ian Gregor, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration.

The plane was a single-engine, homebuilt Wheeler Express, he said.

Both the Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board are investigating. An NTSB investigator is expected to arrive tomorrow.

No information was yet available about the cause of the crash. Officials also were not releasing any information about the pilot.

KPIX, a CBS affiliate in San Francisco, reported that the plane was registered to a man from Menlo Park, in the Bay Area, and took off from the airport in San Carlos.

The fire has been extinguished and did not affect the crowd gathered at the airport to view Monday's solar eclipse, officials said. Several people saw the crash, and investigators were interviewing them Saturday afternoon.

NTSB records show that there have been five fatal crashes at the Madras airport since 1964.

The most recent fatal crash was last year. A pilot from Alaska, Marcus Bruce Paine, 61, crashed while performing at an air show.

Three people died in two separate crashes in the summer of 2005. The two earlier fatal crashes were in 1977 and 1964.


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MADRAS, Ore. (KOIN) — An airplane with 2 people on board crashed AND BURNED near the Madras airport just before 2 p.m. Saturday.

The small airplane did not make it to the airport and crashed about a mile away, down in the Willow Creek Canyon Area. The impact sparked a small brush fire, which Jefferson County Fire crews extinguished quickly.

The pilot died in the crash, according to the Central Oregon emergency information network.

“I heard the plane coming in and I heard it sputtering some — which is not uncommon, we hear it quite often, so I didn’t really think much about it — and then a few seconds later I heard the impact,” Madras resident Michele Quinn told KOIN 6 News.



Visitors who were golfing nearby saw the plane take sharp turn before it crashed into the canyon.

A farmer was the first person on the scene and volunteer firefighters were called upon to help fight the fire that started when the plane crashed.

According to the Federal Aviation Administration, the plane was a single-engine, homebuilt Wheeler Express that was on its way to the Madras airport when it crashed.

Investigators are working to determine why the plane crashed.

More than 200,000 people are expected in Madras for the solar eclipse on August 21. CBS News reports the Madras Municipal Airport normally gets three flights an hour, but as thousands flood to the small town, planes have been arriving every three minutes.




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Pilot after small plane crashes near Madras airport


by KATU Staff

Saturday, August 19th 2017



An emergency vehicle rushes to the site of a fire just south west of the Madras airport. Photo by Dan Morrison, Oregon News Lab

MADRAS, Ore. — A small plane crashed near the Madras airport in the Willow Creek Canyon area, killing two people Saturday afternoon.


Officials confirm the pilot did not survive the crash, and that they were the only two aboard the plane. Willow Creek Canyon is a very steep and remote area.

Emergency responders reached the plane from the south side of the canyon and found it fully engulfed in flames.

Officials say a small fire resulting from the crash is no longer a threat to the area.

The Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board are investigating.

The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office, Jefferson County Fire, Jefferson County EMS, Oregon State Police and Madras Police responded to the scene.

Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to travel to Madras this weekend to view Monday's solar eclipse, and a large viewing area has been set up at the Madras airport near where the crash occurred



Date: 19-AUG-2017
Time: -14:11
Type: Wheeler Express
Owner/operator:

Registration:

C/n / msn:

Fatalities: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 2
Other fatalities: 0
Airplane damage: Written off (damaged beyond repair)
Location: Willow Creek Canyon, Madras, OR - United States of America
Phase: Landing
Nature: Unknown
Departure airport:

Destination airport: Madras Muni (S33)
Narrative:
The aircraft, an experimental Wheeler Express, impacted steep canyon terrain south of Madras Municipal Airport (S33), Madras, Oregon, and a post-impact fire ensued. The airplane was destroyed and the two occupants onboard received fatal injuries.

Sources:
http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2017/08/1_dead_in_plane_crash_near_air_1.html
http://katu.com/news/local/small-plane-reportedly-crashes-near-madras-airport-where-thousands-set-to-view-eclipse
http://koin.com/2017/08/19/small-airplane-crashes-near-madras-airport/
http://www.statesmanjournal.com/story/news/2017/08/19/officials-investigating-plane-crash-madras/583578001/?from=global&sessionKey=&autologin=
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Willow+Creek+Canyon+Trail,+Madras,+OR+97741/@44.6571015,-121.1572625,15z/data=!3m1!1e3!4m2!3m1!1s0x54bee96486f71375:0x1eaead6c2cd35484?hl=en-us