Showing posts with label victims. Show all posts
Showing posts with label victims. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 May 2012

Vigil held for Boston University crash victims

AP  By BRIDGET MURPHYBOSTON -- With graduation approaching, a time for celebration turned somber at Boston University on Saturday as students who were packing up at the end of the school year learned that three classmates studying in New Zealand were killed when their minivan crashed during a weekend trip.

At least five other students were injured in the accident early Saturday, including one who was in critical condition.

About 250 students, faculty members and well-wishers gathered in Boston on Saturday evening for a candlelight vigil for the victims.

Boston University spokesman Colin Riley said those killed in the accident were Daniela Lekhno, 20, of Manalapan, N.J.; Austin Brashears, 21, of Huntington Beach, Calif.; and Roch Jauberty, 21, whose parents live in Paris.

The students were traveling in a minivan near the North Island vacation town of Taupo when the van drifted to the side of the road and then rolled when the driver tried to correct course, New Zealand police said.

Three of the students died at the scene, police said. Another woman was in critical condition at a hospital, while four other students sustained moderate injuries. New Zealand police said Sunday two injured victims - both women, one 20 and the other 21 - remain hospitalized in stable condition. The other two injured in the crash - a 20-year-old man and 20-year-old woman - were released Saturday.

Another BU student, Margaret Theriault, was airlifted from the crash site to a hospital in Taupo and remained in critical condition a day after the accident. In a statement Sunday afternoon, local health official Mary Anne Gill said the 21-year-old woman had surgery Saturday night and was in intensive care.

New Zealand police spokeswoman Kim Perks said Sunday that any suggestion as to the cause of the crash at this stage is "just speculation," and that the investigation into the accident "will take some time."

Efforts by The Associated Press to reach family members of Lekhno and Brashears were unsuccessful Saturday. A person who answered the phone at the home of Lekhno's family declined to comment, and a message left at a phone listing for Brashears' family wasn't immediately returned.

Brashears' mother, Julie, told The Boston Globe that he frequently posted new photos on Facebook documenting his adventures in New Zealand, including bungee-jumping off the Auckland Harbor Bridge on his birthday. She said he planned weekend outings for the study abroad group.

"Everyone called him the cruise director," she said. "He wanted to include everybody on the trips. He loved having an eclectic group of friends."

Student body president Howard Male, a friend of Brashears, said the Boston University students had posted Facebook updates in anticipation of the trip, saying they hoped to view scenery captured on film in the "Lord of the Rings" movies.

"They were all so excited to be able to go explore what many guidebooks ... have called some of the most beautiful places on the planet," Male said.

At the university, final exams ended Friday, and there were few outward signs of any socializing on Saturday morning. The student union was deserted. The main activity involved students in the dorms hauling out boxes and pushing rolling bins filled with their belongings to waiting moving trucks or their parents' cars as they scurried to meet a noon deadline to clear out.

Student Marcelle Richard, who was moving out after finishing her freshman year, said news of the other students' deaths was "really upsetting."

"They were abroad, and it's so sad that something has to happen when you are supposed to be experiencing one of the best times of your life," said Richard, 18.

Richard, of New Orleans, said the tragedy will not stop her from going abroad to study later in her college career.

"It's just like tragedies happen, and I don't want that to stop me from a good learning experience," she said.

Jordan Nunez, 22, a senior who is graduating next week, said the study abroad program is very popular among Boston University students. He estimates 25 percent to 30 percent of his friends traveled to foreign countries to study.

Still, the New Zealand accident has darkened the mood on campus, he said.

"You think everything's always taken care for you, but things can happen wherever you are in the world," he said. "It's just something that's sad for our community."

Study abroad program executive director Bernd Widdig called the students' deaths an "unprecedented tragedy," the worst to hit the program since it began in the 1980s. The New Zealand part of the program began in 2003 and involves courses at the University of Auckland and Auckland University of Technology.

Brashears' girlfriend, junior Tori Pinheiro, cried at the vigil as she recalled how friendly he was and how much she loved him. She said he recently had left her a voicemail saying he missed her and she has been playing it repeatedly.

University President Robert Brown called the students' deaths "a horrible tragedy" and said in an online statement his "prayers go out to the students and their families."

All the students except Theriault were enrolled in a BU study abroad program in Auckland, the BU website said. Theriault was enrolled in a study abroad program in Sydney, Australia.

Sixteen students were traveling in two minivans, on their way to hike the Tongariro Crossing, a famous trek rated as one of the most spectacular in New Zealand. The hike crosses a volcanic crater in the central part of North Island.

None of the eight students in the second van was injured. Seven of those eight students were also from Boston University.

Police official Kevin Taylor said it was unclear why the van drifted to the side of the road. He said some of the students were thrown from the vehicle, indicating they may not have been wearing seat belts.

Dean of Students Kenneth Elmore said it was a terrible end to the year at the school, where commencement is scheduled for May 20.

"This is an unusual time on our campus," Elmore said in a statement on the school website. "We have a lot of people who are traveling and some people who are celebrating the end of final exams. I'd like everyone to please take a moment to pay our respects to the families of those who have been killed."

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Associated Press writer Rodrique Ngowi in Boston contributed to this report.

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Friday, 4 May 2012

Funeral Friday for Bronx River Parkway crash victims

  Eyewitness NewsBRONX (WABC) -- Hundreds of people gathered in the Bronx Friday to bid a final farewell to three generations of one family. The seven family members were killed when their SUV plunged from the Bronx River Parkway on to the grounds of the Bronx Zoo.

Seven hearses - one for each of the victims - pulled up to the old brick church.

The hearses - two white and five black - arrived at the Church of St. Raymond, where 10 children in blue school uniforms stood in a straight line on the steps. A white limousine covered in paper signs with the names of the dead also drove up to the church, located behind a small cemetery. Several Fordham University vans unloaded mourners. Two of the victims worked in the custodial department of the school.

Killed in Sunday's wreck were Jacob Nunez and Ana Julia Martinez, who were visiting from the Dominican Republic community of Manuel Bueno; their daughters, Maria Gonzalez and Maria Nunez, and three grandchildren.

The children were Jocelyn Gonzalez, 10, the daughter of the driver, and Niely Rosario, 7, and Marly Rosario, 3, both daughters of Nunez.

Police say Maria Gonzalez, the driver of the SUV, clipped a highway divider and damaged a tire before the vehicle flew off a highway and plummeted six stories into a ravine.

More than 1,000 mourners streamed into a Bronx funeral home Thursday to pay their respects at a wake for the victims. The line stretched down Unionport Road and around the corner onto Odell Street. The driver's son's fraternity has raised more than $110,000 for the family.

"It hurts a lot to know that I used to be friends with her, and now she's not here anymore," friend Chelsea Pererya said. "It's hard."

With so many dead, there were countless goodbyes to say. The line outside the Parkchester Funeral Home stretched for blocks and lasted for hours before the mourners finally reached the seven coffins inside.

"We're here today," one mourner said. "We don't know tomorrow."

Pereyra was a close friend to Jocelyn Gonzalez.

"We used to be at the same table together," she said. "It was very sad to know that she's not here with us anymore."

The three girls and their mothers will be buried in the Bronx. The bodies of the grandparents will be flown back to the Dominican Republic.

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Thursday, 3 May 2012

Wake Thursday for victims in Carmel fire

  Eyewitness NewsCARMEL (WABC) -- A wake will be held Thursday for the four members of a family who died in a fire in Putnam County.

The fire in Carmel early Tuesday destroyed the home of Larchmont police Captain Thomas Sullivan.

Sullivan, his wife Donna and his daughters, 18-year-old Meaghan and 13-year-old Mairead, died in the blaze.

Their 20-year-old son escaped the flames.

The fire likely started in the front porch area, although authorities still do not know what sparked it.

All the victims died from breathing smoke and carbon monoxide as their home was consumed by fire, a coroner said Wednesday.

The Putnam County coroner, William Stahl, said that "probably" means they died before being burned. He said the autopsy finding that asphyxiation caused the deaths was preliminary, pending microscopic examination of tissue and toxicology tests.

The bodies were "pretty much burned," police Chief Michael Johnson said.

An uncle told The Journal News that the son told him his father then ran back inside to try to rescue his wife and daughters.

"Tommy Sullivan was a hero," said the uncle, Thomas Zielinski.

The son was treated for smoke inhalation at a hospital and released.

The blaze melted the siding of two nearby homes and plastic and paint on cars. The intense flames also prevented firefighters from entering, said Johnson. It took firefighters from several towns three hours to extinguish the flames. Video of the fire showed the home being nearly entirely consumed by a fireball.

"Everything's being explored ... whether it was suspicious or not is still being investigated," Johnson said. He said a dog trained to detect accelerants was used at the scene, but he would disclose what the dog found.

Officials found Thomas Sullivan's body on the rear deck, where Johnson said he apparently landed after jumping from the second floor.

The fire, reported by a neighbor just before 2 a.m., left little behind of the family's home on a quiet street.

Johnson said no 911 calls came from inside the house, which he said was equipped with multiple wired smoke detectors. None sent any alarm to a monitoring station.

Sullivan was a former New York police officer assigned to the Bronx who had left the city for the comparatively tranquil suburbs two decades ago because he felt he could make a bigger difference in a smaller community.

"We are devastated, the village of Larchmont as a whole," said Larchmont Police Chief John Poleway, who said Sullivan was "full of integrity, honesty, he was dedicated to family."

Sullivan's daughters were students at Carmel High School. Mairead was a freshman and Meaghan a senior.

Principal Kevin Carroll said the girls "were good students and nice kids."

"Obviously today their teachers were very upset, and of course the other students," he said, adding that school psychologists were following the girls' class schedules to see the children who would be most upset.

He said that many of the students knew of the fire by the time they got to school, and that administrators made an official announcement at 7:10 a.m.

"It was very quiet for the most part," Carroll said of the school's atmosphere. "There was something in the air."

A funeral was planned for Saturday morning at St. James the Apostle Church in Carmel.

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Tuesday, 1 May 2012

2 victims say NYPD downgraded crimes

NEW YORK (WABC) -- John Jewett says he was victimized twice. First, by a young man he met at a bar and then by the Midtown North Precinct. It all began, last March when the man he met allegedly attacked him with a wood table and threatened to kill him. Police responded, and Jewett was rushed by ambulance to the hospital. He had a fractured rib, numerous cuts and bruises and broken teeth.

Jewett says that the police did everything in their power not to have him file complaint. When he went to the Precinct to get the assault report, he was told there was no record of the incident. For weeks, he pleaded with the Precinct to file it as a crime and charge the man who attacked him.

"They didn't want to report it, they didn't want a statistic," Jewett said.

The NYPD says that the night of the incident that Mr. Jewett stated he was NOT assaulted. But then they say he changed his mind six months later after being contacted by the victim's compensation board. However, Jewett says police never questioned him that night, and it was obvious he sustained serious injuries since he was taken to the hospital by ambulance.

Two months after Jewett was attacked, his alleged assailant went on a crime spree in Connecticut, and was charged with threatening someone with a knife, stealing a car, and fleeing police in a high-speed chase.

One year after Jewett was attacked, the felony charges were filed against that man, however Jewett suspected that police just wanted the crime to go away.

The NYPD apparently wanted to go away too. The 75-year-old keeps busy by looking for discarded items left on the curb which she then sells on ebay. But during her hunt for valuables a few months ago, a young woman assaulted her:

"She grabbed my wrist; she didn't make me fall. She slammed me against the concrete sidewalk - I wound up with my head almost to the door there," said Lou Ellen Davis.

Davis was treated for head injuries and a concussion by her doctor. During that time, she made repeated attempts to get a detective at the 108th precinct to take her assault seriously.

"He obviously did not want to do anything with this case. It's obvious because of the way he did not call me back, despite my repeated calls and my repeated messages," said Davis.

Fourteen days later her assailant was charged, but not with a felony. Instead, the assailant was charged with third degree assault, a misdemeanor. The NYPD's own guidelines clearly state that "intent to cause personal injury to a person 65 or over by a person more than 10 years younger than the victim" is a felony assault.

"Somebody wants themselves to look good that the crime in New York is down. I did not know until recently that misdemeanors are not counted in crimes. I learned that recently.

Davis has been issued an order of protection against her assailant.

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Tuesday, 3 January 2012

Funeral this week for Conn. Christmas fire victims

AP  Eyewitness NewsSTAMFORD, Conn. -- A funeral service will be held in New York this week for three girls killed with their grandparents in a Christmas morning house fire in Connecticut.

Dominic Carella, vice president of the Frank Campbell Funeral Home, says a private wake will be held Wednesday at the funeral home in Manhattan.

A funeral service open to the public will be held at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Manhattan for 10-year-old Lily Badger and 7-year-old twins Grace and Sarah Badger. A private service will be held at Woodlawn Cemetery for all five victims.

Carella says funeral plans for the grandparents, Lomer and Pauline Johnson, are still being worked on.

Authorities say embers in a bag of discarded fireplace ashes started the blaze.

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Friday, 30 December 2011

Funeral next week for Conn. Christmas fire victims

See it on TV? Check here.AP  Eyewitness NewsSTAMFORD, Conn. -- A funeral service will be held in New York next week for three girls killed with their grandparents in a Christmas morning house fire in Connecticut.

Dominic Carella, vice president of the Frank Campbell Funeral Home, says a private wake will be held Wednesday at the funeral home in Manhattan.

A funeral service open to the public will be held at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Manhattan for 10-year-old Lily and 7-year-old twins Grace and Sarah Badger. A private service will be held at Woodlawn Cemetery for all five victims.

Carella says funeral plans for the grandparents, Lomer and Pauline Johnson, are still being worked on.

Authorities say embers in a bag of discarded fireplace ashes started the blaze.

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Tuesday, 6 December 2011

All Eight of Sandusky's Alleged Victims Will Testify

All eight of the boys allegedly sexually abused by former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky will testify against him when preliminary hearings in the case begin next week, according to people close to the case.

News that all eight victims will testify against Sandusky is a blow to his defense. Sandusky's lawyer, Joe Amendola, previously told ABC News that at least one of the boys had denied that he was abused.

Sandusky is accused of molesting eight boys over a 15-year period. A key allegation against the 67-year-old former coach was that he was seen raping a boy about the age of 10 in the showers in 2002.

The grand jury report said the identity of the boy, called Victim 2, was not known, but Amendola told ABC News that he believed the defense knew who the boy was and talked to him.

"The kid is ... now grown up, he's in his 20s. He's adamant that nothing sexual occurred," Amendola said last month.

The lawyer said that, at the time of the accusation, Sandusky provided the boys name to Penn State after he was confronted with accusation.

Amendola said he expected others might also come forward in Sandusky's defense.

Sources told ABC News, however, that all eight boys in the grand jury presentment intend to take the stand against Sandusky when the hearing begins Dec. 13. The hearing in Centre County, Pa., is expected to last several days.

The revelation comes after Sandusky discussed the 2002 allegation with the New York Times, saying he never spoke about it to Penn State's head football coach, Joe Paterno. Paterno was fired last month amid the scandal.

He added that he and Paterno never spoke of a 1998 child molestation complaint leveled at Sandusky that was investigated by Penn State police.

"I never talked to him about either one," Sandusky said. "That's all I can say. ... He's the only one who knows whether anybody ever said anything to him."

In the interview, Sandusky vehemently denied the accusations.

"These allegations are false. I didn't do those things," he said.

Sandusky also told The Times he was a surrogate father to the boys he developed relationships with through his Second Mile charity for at-risk youth. He said he was just roughhousing with the kids, and he described a closeness that many find hard to justify or understand.

"The environment was family-like," Sandusky said. "All the times were precious times, they were significant times."

Attorney Michael Boni, who represents the now-teenage boy known as Victim Number 1 -- who was the first to come forward to accuse Sandusky -- said that the times with the former coach were horrifying for the victims of his alleged crimes.

"These were, quote, 'precious' moments for him," Boni said. "In fact, they were the most vile, horrendous, unspeakable moments for his victims."

Dr. Michael Welner, an ABC News consultant and a forensic psychiatrist, said he finds the evidence against Sandusky compelling.

"They had a discussion in this interview about barriers," said Welner. "There are no barriers. Sexual assault is a process; it's the end point of a process of grooming. It didn't just happen, he orchestrated it, and yet to see that interview, you would think that it just happened, and it's up to you as a jury or audience to see whether it's illegal or not."


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Monday, 5 December 2011

Exclusive: bus shooting victim's widow speaks

  Web produced by Dan Hosea, Eyewitness NewsNEW YORK (WABC) -- Marvin Gilkes was riding on the Q111 bus when a stranger shot him in the back.

Gilkes died instantly, the second victim of an alleged madman who police also accused of murdering his girlfriend's teenaged stepson before he opened fire on the crowded bus.

"I was getting ready for work and he grabbed me and he said, I love you, I'm so in love with you," widow Alicia Gilkes said.

They are words Alicia Gilkes replays in her mind.

One of the last conversations she had with her husband Marvin.

"They say the good die young. So my husband, he was a good man," Gilkes said.

They married in Tobago on July 3, 2010.

Alicia and Marvin met when they were just 7.

They were neighbors in Trinidad.

Marvin would later become a detective on his home island, but quit his job and moved to New York to join his one and only love.

On Friday, Marvin decided to go visit his mother before heading to nursing school.

He jumped on the Q111 bus, never knowing he would cross paths with accused gunman Damel Burton.

Alicia spoke with Marvin right before he got on the bus, reminding him it was pizza night.

"He was like, 'But remember I've got school.' And I said, don't worry we'll leave you some. I'll see you when you get home," Gilkes remembered.

Prosecutors say 36-year-old Marvin Gilkes was shot in the back of the head and died at the scene.

A 29-year-old was struck in the face but survived and is in stable condition.

Queens district attorney's office says that before boarding the bus, Burton first shot at an 18-year-old inside a nearby apartment.

The teen jumped out of a rear window but later died from his injuries.

"I haven't eaten one meal. I'm weak, distraught, he was my everything. My soulmate, it's just been really hard. I never thought I'd be going through this after one year of marriage. I thought we would be growing old together. [It's] very hard," Gilkes said.

Marvin's funeral will be held Wednesday. His family will bring his body back to Trinidad for burial.

Damel Burton, 34, has been charged with murder and attempted murder.

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