Showing posts with label slams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label slams. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2015

Behavior of SUV driver under scrutiny in deadly NY commuter train crash probe - 6 killed, 15 hurt when NY commuter train slams SUV - VIDEO: Six dead after train hits SUV

APTOPIX Train Car Col_Cham640360020515.jpg Feb. 4, 2015: Emergency personnel work to remove the wreckage of a deadly SUV and commuter train accident in Valhalla, N.Y. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow)

Federal investigators probing a deadly crash involving a New York commuter train and a SUV have focused on the behavior of the vehicle’s driver, who was identified Wednesday as a 49-year-old mother of three. 

Five men on the train, as well as the SUV’s driver, were killed late Tuesday in the deadliest accident in the 32-year history of the Metro-North commuter rail. The train smashed into the Mercedes ML350 driven by jewelry store employee Ellen Brody, which had become stuck on the tracks between the railroad crossing gates. 

“The big question everyone wants to know is: Why was this vehicle in the crossing?” said Robert Sumwalt, National Transportation Safety Board vice chairman.

The wreck happened after dark in backed-up traffic in an area where the tracks are straight but driving can be tricky. Motorists exiting or entering the adjacent Taconic State Parkway have to turn and cross the tracks near a wooded area and a cemetery.

Witnesses said Brody calmly got out of her vehicle after the crossing gates came down around her and hit her car. She then got back in and drove forward before the train hit the car, killing her instantly. 

“It looks like where she stopped she did not want to go on the tracks but the proximity of the gate to her car, you know, it was dark — maybe she didn’t know she was in front of the gate,” Rick Hope, who was in the car behind Brody, told WNYW.

“I said to myself, ‘The clock is ticking here, the gate is down, the bells are ringing — what are you going to do here?"” Hope added. “She looked a little confused, gets back in the car and pulls forward on the tracks.”

Traffic was moving slowly at the time, choked with drivers seeking to avoid the Taconic State Parkway because of an accident, Hope noted.

As of Wednesday evening, investigators had no evidence the crossing gates weren’t working properly, but their examination was just beginning, Sumwalt said.

Among other things, investigators also planned to examine the tracks, interview the crew and find out whether the SUV had a data recorder of its own.

Railroad grade crossings typically have gate arms designed to lift automatically if they hit a car or other object on the way down, railroad safety consultant Grady Cothen said. The wooden arms are designed to be easily broken if a car trapped between them moves forward or backward, he said.

Acknowledging that collisions between trains and cars rarely cause rider deaths, Sumwalt said the NTSB would also examine the adequacy of the train’s exits and the intensity of the fire, which investigators believe was sparked by the SUV’s gas tank.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said early indications are that the train was going 58 mph, or within the 60-to-70-mph speed limit in that area. The NTSB said it wanted to confirm speed and other data extracted from the recorder before releasing it.

It was not the first deadly crash at the site: A Metro-North train hit a truck, killing its driver, at the same Commerce Street crossing in 1984, according to Federal Railroad Administration records.

Rep. Patrick Maloney, D-N.Y., said Tuesday’s accident underscores the need for positive train control, a technology that uses WiFi and GPS to monitor trains’ exact position and automatically applies the brakes to prevent collisions or lessen their severity. While not specifically designed to address grade-crossing accidents, the technology can be expanded for such purposes, he said.

Congress passed a 2008 law that requires all railroads to install positive train control by the end of 2015, but it’s clear most of them will not meet the deadline.

The crash was so powerful that the electrified third rail came up and pierced the train and the SUV, and the SUV was pushed about 1,000 feet, Sumwalt said. The blaze consumed the SUV and the train’s first car.

Elizabeth Bordiga was commuting home from her New York City nursing job when she suddenly felt the train jerk a few times. She and other passengers in the middle part of the train started calmly walking to the back. But then they started smelling gasoline, and somebody said there was a fire.

But they couldn’t open the emergency window or figure out how to escape until a firefighter got a door open, she said. Commuters lifted each other down from the train to the ground about 7 feet below, said Bordiga, who uses a cane.

“When I was on the ground, I looked to the right and saw flames,” she said. “I couldn’t believe it.”

The train’s engineer tried to rescue people until the smoke and flames got so severe that he had to escape, Westchester County Executive Rob Astorino said

While officials did not immediately release any victims’ names, employers confirmed that the dead included Walter Liedtke, a curator of European paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Eric Vandercar, 53, a senior managing director at Mesirow Financial.

Every day, trains travel across more than 212,000 highway-grade rail crossings in the U.S. There are an average of 230 to 250 deaths a year at such crossings, down over 50 percent from two decades ago, FRA figures show.

Risky driver behavior or poor judgment accounts for 94 percent of grade crossing accidents, according to a 2004 government report.

Metro-North is the nation’s second-busiest commuter railroad, after the Long Island Rail Road, serving about 280,000 riders a day.

Late last year, the NTSB issued rulings on five Metro-North accidents in New York and Connecticut in 2013 and 2014, repeatedly finding fault with the railroad.

Among the accidents was a 2013 derailment in the Bronx that killed four people, the railroad’s first passenger fatalities, The NTSB said the engineer had fallen asleep at the controls because of a severe, undiagnosed case of sleep apnea.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click for more from MyFoxNY.com.

Click for more from the New York Post.


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Behavior of SUV driver under scrutiny in deadly NY commuter train crash probe - 6 killed, 15 hurt when NY commuter train slams SUV - VIDEO: Six dead after train hits SUV

Monday, January 19, 2015

Redford slams the GOP

robert redford with mike reuters.jpg January 16, 2014. Robert Redford addresses the media at an opening day news conference for the Sundance Film Festival at the Egyptian Theatre in Park City, Utah. (Reuters)

Robert Redford, a guest on the latest edition of Variety‘s PopPolitics on SiriusXM, says that the Republican drive to pass a bill greenlighting the Keystone pipeline “makes no sense,” attributing the GOP majority’s prioritization of the project to the influence of the oil lobby and too many lawmakers “living in the 1950s.”

He also singled out Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

“Somebody has got to start looking at the bigger picture here and telling what the real truth is, so you don’t have people like Mitch McConnell giving you truth that is falsified,” Redford said in an interview. “He represents the polluters’ interest because he is living in the 1950s. So for me we are missing real leadership. Instead we have a guy who looks like he just slid out from under a rock trying to propose an idea that is simply not that truthful. Somebody has to get to the truth of what this is all about.”

Redford, whose environmental activism extends back to the 1950s, has been particularly vocal about the Keystone pipeline, which would ship oil extracted from the tar sands in Canada through the Midwest to the Gulf coast.

President Barack Obama has threatened to veto a bill from Congress that would greenlight the pipeline, which many environmental groups oppose, warning of the dangers of transporting the oil, as well as the message it sends on efforts to wean the country off of fossil fuels. Redford is a trustee of the Natural Resources Defense Council and appeared in one of their recent videos on the “big polluter agenda” of Congress when it comes to energy and the environment.

“When you look at the economic viability of [Keystone], which is we are putting our environment at risk to ship dirty oil, the benefits would go to another country because it is all going to be exported. It makes no sense,” says Redford, who thinks that Keystone would be transporting “the dirtiest oil on the planet that can’t be cleaned up.”

Click here to hear Redford on Variety.com


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Redford slams the GOP

Griffin slams Amal Clooney

george amal clooney golden globes 876.jpg George Clooney, left, and Amal Clooney arrive at the 72nd annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Sunday, Jan. 11, 2015, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP)

Kathy Griffin slammed Amal Clooney’s Golden Globes gown choice in the first post-Joan Rivers episode of “Fashion Police.”

The human rights lawyer and newlywed chose a full-length black Dior gown complete with long, white gloves.

“Yeah, she’s annoying,” “Fashion Police” newcomer Griffin said. ” You heard me! Everybody run in fear! I thought it was weird she had those gloves that remind me of, like, a porn scene, where the guy goes home and there’s the naughty dishwasher and she only has the gloves.”

Griffin didn’t stop there.

“Like, she used those bovine insemination gloves to rake through her hair instead of a brush,” she added before warning “nobody’s safe, nobody gets a pass,” even “the great George Clooney’s” wife.

“Fashion Police” co-host Kelly Osbourne agreed with Griffin and said the gloves belonged “on a vet helping a calf be born.”

Before Griffin began slamming Hollywood’s worst dressed, she took the time to thank her “Fashion Police” predecessor.

“Before I start making more enemies and burning new bridges, I want to thank my good friend,” she said of Rivers. “Joan, I know you are watching from heaven, but I am not afraid to bring the hammer down on anyone.”

WATCH: Four4Four: The WORST of the Golden Globes


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Griffin slams Amal Clooney

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Williamson slams century as New Zealand defeat Pakistan

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AFP) – Kane Williamson hit a brilliant hundred as New Zealand won the fourth day-night international against Pakistan by seven runs in an exciting finish in Abu Dhabi yesterday.

Pakistan went ahead with the match despite calls to postpone it after the Taliban attack on a school in Peshawar on Tuesday which left 148 people dead, 132 of them students.

Both teams observed a two-minute silence and wore black armbands as a tribute to the victims.

Williamson’s 105-ball 123 steered New Zealand to an imposing 299-5 before Younis Khan’s first one-day hundred in six years got Pakistan agonisingly close as they finished on 292-8 in 50 overs.

That left the five-match series all square at 2-2, setting up a winner-takes-all final game, also in Abu Dhabi, tomorrow.

Williamson praised his side’s sensible batting.

“It was just about executing the plans we had, and just trying to build partnerships and then it was great to come back with the ball in the second part of the Pakistan innings,” said the New Zealand captain.

Younis’s 117-ball 103 ended a drought lasting 74 innings as he capitalised on being dropped by Ross Taylor off Adam Milne when only on two.

However, when the veteran was seventh out bowled by left-arm spinner Daniel Vettori (3-53), it ended Pakistan’s hopes.

Shahid Afridi helped Younis add a quick 66 for the sixth wicket, hitting five fours and two sixes in his 25-ball 49 but his fall, followed shortly afterwards by Younis’s departure, saw the match swing back New Zealand’s way.

Younis, whose last hundred came against the West Indies at the same venue in 2008, put on 49 with Nasir Jamshed (30) for the second wicket and another 90 for the fifth with Umar Akmal who made 29.

In all Younis hit four boundaries and two sixes.

He also became the oldest Pakistani to notch a One-Day hundred at 37 years 18 days, erasing Zaheer Abbas’s name from the record books as he was 35 years and 331 days old when he struck his last century for his country.

Pakistan had lost opener Ahmed Shehzad in Matt Henry’s first over for a duck.

Afridi said it was tough to play after the Peshawar tragedy.

“We pray for all those kids who lost their lives,” said Afridi.

New Zealand recorded the third highest total at the ground.

Williamson added 44 for the second wicket with Guptill and another 63 for the third with Taylor.

Williamson, who scored an unbeaten 70 in New Zealand’s four-wicket win in the second match in Sharjah, pulled paceman Mohammad Irfan to deep square-leg for his ninth boundary to complete his century off just 92 balls.

He was finally bowled by Irfan off the last delivery of the innings, having hit 12 boundaries.

Williamson’s hundred was built on a fine start to the innings.

Guptill and Dean Brownlie had given a solid 81-run start before leg-spinner Afridi provided his team with the breakthrough in the 17th over.

Guptill hit seven fours in his 78-ball knock before he was caught behind off paceman Sohail Tanvir.


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Williamson slams century as New Zealand defeat Pakistan

Monday, October 27, 2014

Evan Rachel Wood slams mag

evan rachel wood1 two toned hair reuters.jpg May 10. 2014. Actress Evan Rachel Wood arrives at the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center’s annual “An Evening With Women” event in Beverly Hills, California. (Reuters)

When she was 15, Evan Rachel Wood appeared on the cover of Vanity Fair with a host of other rising young actresses including Lindsay Lohan, Hilary Duff and the Olsen twins. Sadly according to Rob Shuter of naughtybutnicerob.com the experience left her feeling like “meat.”

On Tuesday a Twitter user posted a picture of the magazine’s July 2003 cover with the words “NEVER FORGET.”

The following day the “True Blood” actress responded with a series of tweets that made clear just how traumatic the shoot was for her.

The 27-year-old actress did acknowledge in a subsequent tweet that she has since then been photographed by the magazine and had a lovely time. The “True Blood” actress also responded to people criticizing her postings.


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Evan Rachel Wood slams mag

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Driver dies as passenger bus slams into gas tanker in Stony Hill

Saturday, October 04, 2014 | 9:33 AM    

KINGSTON, Jamaica — A Coaster bus driver died this morning and several passengers injured after the bus slammed into a gas tanker in Red Gal Ring, Stony Hill St Andrew.

The bus was heading into Kingston when it slammed into the tanker that was heading up the hill in the opposite direction.

Passengers reportedly said that the driver had been having problems getting the bus in gear while descending the steep hill, when the crash occurred.

No one in the tanker was hurt.

The driver of the bus was trapped in the wreckage and died on the scene. Some passengers reportedly received broken limbs and cuts and had to be rushed to the hospital.

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Driver dies as passenger bus slams into gas tanker in Stony Hill

Friday, September 12, 2014

Lady Gaga slams critics


File – Lady Gaga

Lady Gaga says she’d “rather be fat than shallow”. The Bad Romance hitmaker – who previously admitted her weight fluctuates because of her love of Italian food – lashed out at critics of her figure after photographs of her in a flesh-coloured swimsuit attracted some negative comments on Instagram.

The 28-year-old star captioned one of the images, taken in Dubai: “#bodyrevolution Proud at any size, because the inside is what really counts. Plus, it’s all how you pose! Just ask the supermodels!”

After receiving support from a fan on Twitter, she replied: “Id rather be fat than be shallow (sic)”

When another fan wrote: “I honestly can’t imagine receiving comments about my weight everyday. How insulting and degrading. Also gaga is perfect so back off,” the blonde beauty responded: “all day long every day, so what if I got a belly sometimes, sometimes I don’t. There’s people starving in the world. #whocares.”

The Applause hitmaker, who also recently insisted she is “curvy and proud,” previously admitted she used to battle with an eating disorder.

She said at the time: “I have struggled with an eating disorder for over 10 years and I take that very seriously, I take the struggle of others very seriously.”

But earlier this year, she claimed she had overcome her troubles. She said: “I am better with food. I don’t have an eating disorder anymore. I’m also better at not letting people take advantage of me. I should be around people who cherish my talents, my health, my time … I’m an artist. I deserve better than to be loyal to people who only believe in me because I make money.”


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Lady Gaga slams critics

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Lady Gaga slams critics


File – Lady Gaga

Lady Gaga says she’d “rather be fat than shallow”. The Bad Romance hitmaker – who previously admitted her weight fluctuates because of her love of Italian food – lashed out at critics of her figure after photographs of her in a flesh-coloured swimsuit attracted some negative comments on Instagram.

The 28-year-old star captioned one of the images, taken in Dubai: “#bodyrevolution Proud at any size, because the inside is what really counts. Plus, it’s all how you pose! Just ask the supermodels!”

After receiving support from a fan on Twitter, she replied: “Id rather be fat than be shallow (sic)”

When another fan wrote: “I honestly can’t imagine receiving comments about my weight everyday. How insulting and degrading. Also gaga is perfect so back off,” the blonde beauty responded: “all day long every day, so what if I got a belly sometimes, sometimes I don’t. There’s people starving in the world. #whocares.”

The Applause hitmaker, who also recently insisted she is “curvy and proud,” previously admitted she used to battle with an eating disorder.

She said at the time: “I have struggled with an eating disorder for over 10 years and I take that very seriously, I take the struggle of others very seriously.”

But earlier this year, she claimed she had overcome her troubles. She said: “I am better with food. I don’t have an eating disorder anymore. I’m also better at not letting people take advantage of me. I should be around people who cherish my talents, my health, my time … I’m an artist. I deserve better than to be loyal to people who only believe in me because I make money.”


View the original article here



Lady Gaga slams critics