Rain and Skidding Cost Another Life

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Posted on 11th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Our recurring theme about the relationship between tire safety and hydroplaning accidents got another fatal example early this morning, when an Oklahoma woman was killed after a pickup truck hydroplaned into the vehicle in which she was driving. For the complete story, click here.

According to the ABC News story:
A three-car accident during a heavy rain killed a Claremore woman early Sunday, Tulsa police said.

Heather R. Good, 27, died in the pileup near 1700 S. U.S. 169 after a Chrysler Sebring in which she was a passenger crashed into a Chevy pickup that had hydroplaned on the slick highway, said Tulsa Police Capt. Karen Tipler.


It is critical to evaluate whether the truck that hydroplaned had its better tires on the front, instead of where they should have been, on the back. See http://fishtail.tv

Making the risk factors of an accident worse, the driver of the pickup truck had apparently been drinking, before the 3:30 a.m. accident. Three deadly risks all combined: hydroplaning, drinking and fatigue. See http://semi-accident.com/fatigue.html
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

Car collides with trailer rig in Texas, killing 5

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Posted on 9th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/8/2008 12:33 AM

GEORGE WEST, Texas (AP) _ A car collided with a tractor-trailer rig hauling fuel oil on Interstate 37 in South Texas, killing five members of an extended family, authorities said.

San Patricio County Sheriff Leroy Moody said the five victims all were in the car, which caught fire after veering into another lane and colliding with the tanker. The tanker truck did not catch fire and the driver was not injured.

Department of Public Safety Sr. Trooper Gerald Lee Bryant identified the dead as driver Cynthia Perez, 32; Robert Perez Jr., 38; Robert Perez Sr., 60; David Perez, 23; Brittany Perez, 12, all of Corpus Christi. Bryant told the Corpus Christi Caller-Times that Robert Perez Sr. and Robert Perez Jr. were father and son and that Brittany Perez was Cynthia Perez’s daughter.

The tanker was hauling a load of fuel oil from the Valero refinery in Three Rivers to the Port of Corpus Christi, about 40 miles southeast of the crash site near the small community of Swinney Switch.

The southbound lanes of I-37 remained closed late Thursday, more than nine hours after the crash.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

Crash of illegal charter bus in Texas kills 15

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Posted on 8th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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The below AP story is a perfect example of why federal transportation regulations and trial lawyers make a difference for a safe world. Not only was this accident a direct result of failure to comply with regulations, it is clear that a more diligent approach to safety, would have saved lives. In a world where our government is run by people who think government is bad, only the trial lawyers are there to force those who kill and maim, to pay the consequences.

Another irony, is that tires has become a particularly relevant topic for us and while this tire disaster isn’t quite the same as our Two Tires Done Wrong campaign, it is illustrative of how dangerous doing tires the wrong way, can be. The manufacturer’s recommendations should always be followed with tires (but don’t assume that the installer’s of your tires are doing so.) See
“>http://fishtail.tv


Attorney Gordon Johnson
http://fishtail.tv
http://subtlebraininjury.com
http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com
http://vestibulardisorder.com
http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney
g@gordonjohnson.com
800-992-9447
©Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr. 2008

Date: 8/9/2008 12:17 AM

By LINDA STEWART BALL and DANNY ROBBINS
Associated Press Writer

SHERMAN, Texas (AP) _ An unlicensed charter bus carrying a Vietnamese-American Catholic group on a pilgrimage to a religious festival blew an illegally treaded tire and skidded off a highway early Friday, killing at least 15 people and injuring dozens, authorities said.

The bus, en route from Houston to Missouri with 55 people aboard, smashed into a guardrail and tipped over along the edge of the road at about 12:45 a.m., crushing one side of the vehicle and scattering luggage, clothes, a sandal and a blood-soaked pillow across the grass and pavement.

Ten people were taken to the hospital by helicopter, and some were in critical condition late Friday.

Passenger Leha Nguyen, 45, said passengers were dozing off when she heard a noise and screaming, and opened her eyes.

“Somebody was laying on my legs. A lady next to me, she had her arm crushed up. The lady who was on my left, a man was on top of her,” she said at a hospital. She said nobody had been wearing seat belts, and people were strewn all over. A television had fallen on one person.

“I think I’m the luckiest one out of most people,” she said.

Most of the passengers were from the Vietnamese Martyrs Church and two other mostly Vietnamese congregations in Houston. They were on their way to Carthage, Mo., for an annual open-air festival honoring the Virgin Mary.

The Marian Days pilgrimage, begun in the late 1970s, attracts thousands of Catholics of Vietnamese descent and includes a large outdoor Mass each day, entertainment and camping at night.

“Please pray for us,” said Holly Nguyen, a 38-year-old church member who was following behind the bus in a car but did not see the wreck. She anxiously awaited word of her father, who was on the bus when it ran off the road about 65 miles north of Dallas, close to the Oklahoma line.

The right front tire, which blew out, had been retreaded in violation of safety standards, said Debbie Hersman, a member of the National Transportation Safety board. The tread had separated from the tire itself in a process called delamination.

“If there is a loss of pressure or the tire becomes delaminated, it’s much more difficult to control the vehicle,” she said.

It is legal to retread such tires but not on the axle that steers the bus, Hersman said. The driver was a 52-year-old who had a commercial license but whose medical certification had expired she said.

The driver was reported in stable condition.

The bus operator, Iguala BusMex Inc. of Houston, had applied in June for a federal license to operate as a charter but was still awaiting approval, according to online records.

The company recently filed incorporation papers, listing the same owner and address as Angel Tours Inc., which was forced by federal regulators to take its vehicles out of interstate service June 23 after an unsatisfactory review, records show. Details of the review were not in the online records.

Neither entity is currently authorized to operate as a carrier in interstate commerce, said John H. Hill, administrator for the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.

“We have requested law enforcement agencies to be alert for any buses being operated by Angel Tours or Iguala BusMex, since they are not authorized to operate legally,” he said in a written statement. “If found on the road, we want law enforcement to immediately stop and place the vehicles out of service.”

In a Houston building with a weathered Angel Tours plywood sign, a man declined to identify himself Friday or comment to The Associated Press about the wreck. An outgoing phone message at Angel Tours late Friday said the voicemail box was full.

The tragedy was the nation’s deadliest bus crash since 2004, when 15 people were killed in a wreck in Arkansas on their way to Mississippi’s casinos. In 2005 near Dallas, 23 people were killed when a bus carrying nursing home residents away from Hurricane Rita caught fire while in bumper-to-bumper traffic.

The Rev. Joseph Vu, a priest at the Vietnamese Martyrs Church and vicar for the 30,000 to 35,000 Vietnamese Catholics in the region, was not on the trip but arrived at a relief station set up for victims’ families at a church in nearby Denison.

“I’m going to tell people we don’t blame anybody,” he said. “This happened like Katrina, like Challenger. What we can do is pray.” He added: “God will comfort them. Tell people to keep trusting in God. Do not blame anybody. Do not ask why. Now we just help each other to get through this.”

A sobbing Mary Nguyen, a member of the Vietnamese Martyrs Church for more than 10 years, learned that a close friend had died. “She was just a very good person,” she said. “The church is like one big family here. We’re very close. We stick together.”

About 900 people gathered Friday night at Vietnamese Martyrs Church for a Mass at which Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo appeared.

“We are here with them to pray for those who are lost and for God’s consolation in this time of grief and loss,” DiNardo said. “The Vietnamese Catholic culture is very strong. A lot of those who have come here have been through a great deal just to get to this country. They’ve always preserved their Catholic faith. This is a trial. This is a challenge.”

DiNardo said the losses, which included church leaders, were “incomprehensible.”

One of the victims was identified as Hoangy Thi Dung, 71, of Houston, who was pronounced dead by a Grayson County justice of the peace. Authorities had not released the identity of other victims.

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Anabelle Garay in Sherman; Regina L. Burns, Jamie Stengle in Dallas; Angela K. Brown in Fort Worth; and Michael Graczyk and Monica Rhor in Houston.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

More News On Morgan Freeman Accident

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Posted on 7th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/6/2008 10:23 PM

By HOLBROOK MOHR
Associated Press Writer

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) _ The woman who was injured along with Morgan Freeman in a weekend car accident apparently is a friend of the Oscar-winning actor who had offered him a ride home, a crash witness says.

Freeman, 71, was driving a 1997 Nissan Maxima that authorities said belongs to Demaris Meyer, 48, of Memphis, Tenn., when the car veered off a rural road Sunday night a few miles from Freeman’s home in the Mississippi Delta. The car flipped at least twice.

Bill Rogers, a retired police officer who was the first person to arrive at the scene, said a dazed Freeman told him that he and Meyer were headed to his home in Charleston, a small town some 90 miles south of Memphis.

“He said that she had offered him a ride home; that they were friends and she had offered him a ride home and she didn’t really know the way and so he was going to drive the vehicle,” Rogers said Tuesday, recalling a conversation he had with the actor.

Freeman’s friend and business partner, Bill Luckett, has told the Commercial Appeal newspaper that Meyer is the actor’s friend.

Rogers said he talked to Freeman and Meyer in attempt to keep them conscious — something he was trained to do as a police officer.

“They said they were coming from Clarksdale,” Rogers said.

Freeman owns several businesses in Clarksdale, about 40 miles from his home, including the Ground Zero Blues Club and a restaurant named Madidi. Ashley Norris, the club’s manager, said Wednesday that Freeman had not been there the night of the accident. No one answered the phone at Madadi.

Rescuers used a jaws-of-life machine to free “The Dark Knight” star and Meyer from the wreckage. Freeman was airlifted to the Regional Medical Center in Memphis, Tenn. He suffered a broken arm, broken elbow and shoulder damage.

Hospital spokeswoman Kathy Stringer said Wednesday that Freeman was still listed in serious condition. The actor had surgery Monday to reconnect nerves and repair damage to his left arm and hand, according to his publicist, Donna Lee. Lee said Freeman will make a full recovery.

Hospital officials say Meyer isn’t listed in the hospital’s registry. However, under medical privacy laws, people can request that their names not be listed as patients at a hospital.

A Mississippi Highway Patrol officer said Meyer was in the Tennessee hospital when the agency called to see how she and Freeman were doing Monday night.

Calls to Meyer’s home Wednesday were not answered. Her condition was not immediately available. Rogers said Meyer did not appear to be injured as severely as Freeman.

Not much is known about Meyer. Rogers said she appeared to be an avid gardener — a hobby reportedly enjoyed by Freeman and his wife — because several gardening tools were flung around the accident scene when the car’s trunk was ripped open by the impact.

Freeman won an Oscar for his role in “Million Dollar Baby.” His screen credits also include “Driving Miss Daisy” and “The Bucket List.”

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.

—–

Without any inside information, I raised two issues earlier this week on the Morgan Freeman accident. The first raised was the question as to whether the hydroplaning because of the tires on the vehicle Freeman was driving could have been the culprit. News reports have now made it clear that Freeman’s accident was caused by hydroplaning:

According to the Post Chronicle: “Morgan Freeman was driving with a friend, Demaris Meyer, Sunday night when heavy rain may have led to his horrific car accident.” See http://www.postchronicle.com/news/original/article_212162424.shtm

The cause of such hydroplaning accidents is often caused by having put the tires of the vehicle with the most traction on the front of the vehicle, not the back, per the manufacturer’s recommendations. If such is the case, the installer or seller of such tires could be responsible for all of the injuries suffered in this wreck. See http://fishtail.tv

The other issue I commented on earlier this week was the likelihood that Freeman could have suffered a brain injury in this wreck, something that can completely change the life of someone of his age. This Post Chronicle story also makes it clear that he was unconscious. It is critical that Freeman be checked for amnesia, not just of the wreck, which he clearly has, but also of the events of the days following. How long he is amnestic will predict whether he has a good outcome or serious problems from such concussion. See our Concussion Clinic videos at http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

Anthrax widow’s lawsuit blames US for death

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Posted on 6th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/5/2008 7:23 PM

By CURT ANDERSON
AP Legal Affairs Writer

MIAMI (AP) _ The widow of a tabloid photo editor who died in the 2001 anthrax attacks insisted in a $50 million federal lawsuit filed years ago that the U.S. government was ultimately responsible for his death.

Now that the FBI is pinning the blame on government scientist Bruce Ivins, the lawsuit brought by Maureen Stevens looks positively clairvoyant. And results of the FBI investigation could have a major effect on the outcome of her case.

“We were right all along,” Patrick Hogan, the son-in-law of Maureen and the late Robert Stevens, said in a telephone interview Tuesday. “It seems to me it’s pretty much a slam dunk.”

Stevens was a photo editor at American Media Inc., the publisher of the National Enquirer, Sun and Globe gossip tabloids, when he was exposed to anthrax that was mailed to AMI offices in Boca Raton. Stevens died Oct. 5, 2001, the first of five people to be killed and 17 others to be sickened in the anthrax attacks.

Two years later, Maureen Stevens filed her lawsuit. In it, she claims the U.S. government was negligent because it failed to safeguard strains of the deadly anthrax bacteria at the U.S. Army disease research center at Fort Detrick, Md.

The government, her lawsuit says, “owed a duty of care, the highest degree of care” in handling of anthrax and supervising employees who had access to it. Although she didn’t know it when the lawsuit was filed, Ivins was one of those employees, a microbiologist who was working on an anthrax antidote. Ivins committed suicide last week as he was being investigated.

“One of the real areas of satisfaction, if you can call it that, is that we’ve maintained all along this was an inside job,” said Richard Schuler, Maureen Stevens’ attorney.

The case is unique among the legal actions brought after the anthrax attacks, according to the lawyers involved. Employees of a postal facility in Washington, D.C., where two workers died, sued the Postal Service for allegedly failing to protect them, but a federal judge in 2004 ruled the service is immune.

If the federal government ultimately names Ivins as the anthrax attack perpetrator, Schuler said the government’s lawyers should drop their long battle and settle the lawsuit. He noted that another scientist wrongly implicated by the FBI in the plot, Steven Hatfill, recently was paid $5.8 million to settle his lawsuit against the Justice Department.

“It’s been a long road for this family,” Schuler said. “I hope somebody who has some authority will call us and make it right with this family.”

Maureen Stevens declined an interview request, deferring to her attorney. The lawsuit, also filed on behalf of the couple’s three grown children, seeks a maximum of $50 million in compensatory damages for the government’s alleged negligence in Stevens’ death. Schuler said that figure represents the upper reaches of a possible damage award or settlement.

Two of the Stevens children did not return phone messages or e-mails seeking comment Tuesday. Hogan, husband of daughter Heidi, said he’s hopeful that the FBI has its man in Ivins.

“It seems to me they botched this thing from the beginning. It was one of their own people,” Hogan said. “I’m just very happy that they actually found somebody.”

A U.S. Justice Department spokesman declined comment Tuesday on the lawsuit. But in court, federal attorneys have fought hard to get the Stevens claim dismissed and currently are appealing a federal judge’s refusal to do so. The case is on hold pending the outcome of that.

One court document contends that even if a U.S. employee is found responsible for the anthrax attacks, those acts are “beyond the scope of employment” and the government isn’t liable. In the alternative, the federal lawyers say such actions were controlled by someone else and not the government, so it shouldn’t have to pay the Stevens family.

“The United States denies as a matter of law and fact that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief sought,” the government lawyers said in court papers.

The next development in the lawsuit will be a ruling later this year from the Florida Supreme Court on whether the U.S. government and a private laboratory named as a possible second source of the anthrax have a duty under Florida law to protect the public from such lethal materials.

The state court was asked to resolve that legal question by the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta, which is considering the government’s appeal of the ruling by U.S. District Judge Daniel T.K. Hurley refusing the dismiss the case.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

Natural gas utility fined $80K in Texas explosion

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Posted on 6th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/6/2008 4:27 AM

DALLAS (AP) _ A state regulator has fined a natural gas utility and one of its subcontractors $80,000 after finding violations connected to a deadly gas-related explosion in a Dallas suburb.

The May 16 explosion destroyed two homes in McKinney and sent three people to hospitals, including a 71-year-old woman who later died. The Dallas County medical examiner’s office ruled Nancy Foster’s death last month was due to complications from burns.

In a report released Tuesday, the Texas Railroad Commission documented eight violations, six by Atmos Energy Corp. and two by M.J. Sheridan of Texas, whose work crew cut the pipeline.

The Railroad Commission report cited Atmos for violations in the areas of procedures, records, operator qualification, and drug and alcohol testing. The commission faulted M.J. Sheridan for shortcomings in damage prevention.

Frank Branson, an attorney for the Foster family, said he was astounded by the commission’s findings.

“This takes you through the handbook of what not to do,” he told The Dallas Morning News.

Ray Granado, spokesman for Atmos Energy, said in a statement late Tuesday that the company had just received the commission’s report.

“We support our employees, who we believe took appropriate actions at the time of the incident,” the statement said. “We continue to review our practices and protocols in the wake of this tragedy, and will respond further at the appropriate time.”

The report said no homes were evacuated immediately after the 4:30 p.m. rupture and the first call to 911 was made at 5:38 p.m., after the first of three explosions. The report said if emergency officials had been sent sooner, they may have been able to determine whether homes needed to be evacuated.

Each violation carries a maximum fine of $10,000, commission spokeswoman Ramona Nye said. She said Atmos and M.J. Sheridan have 30 days to respond.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

Morgan Freeman in ‘good spirits’ after car crash surgery

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Posted on 5th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/5/2008 3:48 PM

By HOLBROOK MOHR
Associated Press Writer

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) _ Morgan Freeman is doing well after surgery to reconnect nerves and repair damage to his left arm and hand following a car wreck Sunday night, his publicist said.

The surgery Monday night “lasted approximately four and a half hours including recovery and he is in good spirits and was visiting with family members this morning,” Donna Lee, Freeman’s publicist, said in a statement Tuesday.

“He was walking this (morning), and is looking forward to his release as soon as possible,” Lee said.

Freeman, 71, and Demaris Meyer, 48, of Memphis, Tenn., were taken to the Regional Medical Center in Memphis following the accident on a dark stretch of rural Mississippi Delta highway in Tallahatchie County.

State troopers said the car careened off the highway and flipped end-over-end before landing upright in a ditch. Rescuers used a jaws-of-life machine to free “The Dark Knight” star and Meyer from the wreckage of the car.

Freeman was airlifted about 90 miles to the Regional Medical Center where he was treated for a broken arm, broken elbow and shoulder damage, Lee said.

Bill Rogers, a retired police officer, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that he witnessed the accident near the small town of Charleston, not far from where Freeman owns a home with his wife.

Rogers said Freeman complained of pain from injuries before being loaded onto a medical helicopter, but “was more concerned about the people around him than himself.”

“Mr. Freeman thought he may have gone to sleep but he wasn’t sure,” Rogers said. “He didn’t know what happened.”

“The car was bent on the front as well as rear — I mean severely,” Rogers said. “It was so bad I couldn’t tell what it was.”

The Mississippi Highway Patrol is still investigating the accident, Sgt. Ben Williams said Tuesday. Alcohol and drugs don’t appear to be a factor and no citations are likely to be filed, he said.

Hospital spokeswoman Kathy Stringer said Freeman remained in serious condition Tuesday. Meyer’s name wasn’t in the hospital registry, Stringer said. However, under medical privacy laws, people can request that their names not be listed as patients at a hospital.

Williams said Meyer was in the Memphis hospital when the Highway Patrol checked Monday night and both she and Freeman were in “good spirits.”

Rogers said he was “watching television about 11:15 and I heard a car sliding on the highway out in front of our house.”

“As I looked out the window, I saw it began to flip after it hit our next-door neighbor’s drive. It went end-over-end about twice and then it came back on its wheels in the ditch. It was a mess,” he said.

Rogers said Freeman and Meyer were briefly unconscious when he got to the vehicle. Freeman was driving Meyer’s 1997 Nissan Maxima, authorities said.

Freeman won an Oscar for his role in “Million Dollar Baby.” His screen credits also include “Driving Miss Daisy” and “The Bucket List.”

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.

—–

As the news of Morgan Freeman’s recovery is good, the issue that no one is paying attention to is that he clearly suffered a concussion in this wreck, as the reports are that he was unconscious. It is classic for all of the focus to be on the orthopedic injuries and nothing on the brain, because he can talk and communicate. But has any testing been done for amnesia, the most significant predictor of poor long term outcome? It is significant that he doesn’t have a memory of the accident. See our Concussion Clinic videos on the significance of amnesia at http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

It is also significant that those of his age have far worse outcomes than younger people. We wish him the best, but also hope that someone makes an attempt to see if he is post-concussional.
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

5 dead, 3 hurt after plane hits Oregon home in fog

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Posted on 4th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/4/2008 9:53 PM

BC-Oregon Plane Crash,3rd Ld-Writethru/379


By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER
Associated Press Writer

GEARHART, Ore. (AP) _ A small plane crashed into a seaside house in heavy fog early Monday, killing two people aboard and three children inside the vacation home, authorities said.

A woman and two children in the home were injured.

Gearhart city officials said pilot Jason Ketchson and passenger Frank Toohey were aboard the plane that crashed before 7 a.m., apparently hitting a tree during conditions described as foggy with low clouds.

When the plane crashed, six people were in the four-bedroom rental home for a family reunion and vacation, City Administrator Dennis McNally said. A vacant house next door was also damaged.

The children killed were identified as Julia Reimann, 10, of Beaverton; and Hesam Farrar Masoudi, 12, and Grace Masoudi, 8, both from Denver.

Ruth Jackson-Reimann, 47, and two children, Christopher Reimann, 13, and Sarah Reimann, 11, were flown to Portland for treatment at a burn center, said Michael Griffiths, executive director of the regional emergency transport consortium Life Flight.

The hospital declined to release their conditions.

Jackson-Reimann rescued one of the children and another climbed out a window, officials said. Two adults staying at the home were out for a walk when the plane crashed.

The owner of the house, Greg Marshall of Portland, told The Oregonian newspaper that the victims arrived Sunday for a planned two-week stay.

The plane, a four-seat Cessna, was owned by Aviation Adventures in Seaside. The company had rented it to Ketchson, McNally said.

McNally said the plane had just taken off from the airport and was apparently headed to Klamath Falls in southern Oregon.

An explosion was reported about 20 seconds after the crash.

Rebecca Herren lives about a block and a half from the crash site.

“I heard the plane above and thought, ‘Gosh, it’s awfully low and awfully early,’” she said.

The explosion shook her house and was followed by two smaller explosions, she said. The city said homes were rocked up to a half-mile away.

The cause of the crash has not been determined. Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board investigators were on the scene.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

Update on Morgan Freeman

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Posted on 4th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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Date: 8/4/2008 6:36 PM

BC-People-Morgan Freeman,9th Ld-Writethru/529
Eds: INSERTS new grafs 3-5 to UPDATE with statement from Freeman’s publicist, highway patrol spokesman; INSERTS new grafs 15-16 to ADD comment from Steve Azar; REMOVES dated material; EDITS to conform. AP Video.
Morgan Freeman seriously injured in car crash
By HOLBROOK MOHR
Associated Press Writer

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) _ Oscar-winning actor Morgan Freeman was hospitalized in serious condition Monday after the car he was driving left a rural road in the Mississippi Delta and flipped several times.

Freeman, 71, was airlifted to the Regional Medical Center in Memphis, Tenn., about 90 miles north of the accident in rural Tallahatchie County.

The actor “has a broken arm, broken elbow and minor shoulder damage, but is in good spirits,” according to a statement from Donna Lee, Freeman’s publicist. A hospital spokeswoman said Freeman was in serious condition but would not discuss his injuries.

“He is having a little bit of surgery this afternoon or tomorrow to help correct the damage,” Lee’s statement said. “He says he’ll be OK and is looking forward to a full recovery.”

Freeman, who won an Oscar for his role in “Million Dollar Baby,” is among the stars in “The Dark Knight,” now in theaters. His screen credits also include “Driving Miss Daisy.”

Freeman and a companion were traveling on a dark, two-lane highway that cuts through the expansive farmlands of the Mississippi Delta when the car ran off the side of the road shortly before midnight Sunday, authorities said. The vehicle flipped several times but landed upright in a ditch alongside Mississippi Highway 32, about 5 miles west of Charleston, not far from where Freeman owns a home with his wife.

Mississippi Highway Patrol spokesman Sgt. Ben Williams said rescuers had to use the jaws of life to remove Freeman from the car.

“He was lucid, conscious. He was talking, joking with some of the rescue workers at one point,” said Clay McFerrin, editor of Sun Sentinel in Charleston, who arrived at the scene soon after the accident happened.

McFerrin said it appeared Freeman’s car was airborne when it left the highway.

Bystanders converged on the accident scene trying to get a glimpse of the actor, McFerrin said.

When one person tried to snap a photo with a cell phone camera, Freeman joked, “no freebies, no freebies,” McFerrin said.

Williams said Freeman was driving a 1997 Nissan Maxima that belonged to Demaris Meyer of Memphis.

“There’s no indication that either alcohol or drugs were involved,” Williams said. He said both Freeman and Meyer were wearing seat belts. The woman’s condition was not immediately available.

Freeman was born in Memphis, Tenn., but spent much of his childhood in the Mississippi Delta. He is a co-owner of the Ground Zero Blues Club in Clarksdale.

“I’m definitely concerned,” country singer and fellow Mississippian Steve Azar, whose video for his hit “Waitin’ on Joe” featured Freeman, said Monday. The two have also worked charity events together. “He’s been the best ambassador our state has ever had.”

“He could live anywhere in the world and he came back home,” Azar said. “I just think it shows a lot about him as a person and how grounded he is.”

The hospital where Freeman is being treated is commonly known as The Med, and is an acute-care teaching facility that serves patients within 150 miles of Memphis.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

Morgan Freeman injured in car accident in Miss.

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Posted on 4th August 2008 by gjohnson in Uncategorized

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We are of course shocked to hear about the serious wreck involving Morgan Freeman, one of America’s great actors. While more details as to what occurred will be forthcoming shortly, our first reaction is what about the tires on this vehicle? Was it raining at the time? Could faulty tires in a hydroplaning situation have accounted for this? If so, there could be significant liability against someone other than Freeman or the owner of the car.

See our youtube video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t6KBXEaNcY8 As a trial lawyer, I have always been frustrated by the one car accident, when it seems as if no one is to blame. What I have learned is that a thorough investigation, in even these situations, especially of the tires, can uncover serious wrongdoing. See http://fishtail.tv

Attorney Gordon Johnson
http://fishtail.tv
http://subtlebraininjury.com
http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com
http://vestibulardisorder.com
http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney
g@gordonjohnson.com
800-992-9447
©Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr. 2008


Date: 8/4/2008 2:12 PM

By HOLBROOK MOHR
Associated Press Writer

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) _ Oscar-winning actor Morgan Freeman was in a hospital in Memphis, Tenn., on Monday after being injured in a car accident near his home in Mississippi.

Regional Medical Center spokeswoman Kathy Stringer said Freeman, 71, is in serious condition. The hospital is about 90 miles north of the accident scene in rural Tallahatchie County in the Mississippi Delta.

Mississippi Highway Patrol spokesman Sgt. Ben Williams said Freeman was driving a 1997 Nissan Maxima belonging to Demaris Meyer of Memphis when the car left a rural highway and flipped several times shortly before midnight Sunday.

“There’s no indication that either alcohol or drugs were involved,” Williams said. He said both Freeman and Meyer were wearing seat belts. The woman’s condition was not immediately available.

Freeman was airlifted to the hospital in Tennessee.

Clay McFerrin, editor of Sun Sentinel in Charleston, said he arrived at the accident scene on Mississippi Highway 32 soon after it happened about 5 miles west of Charleston, not far from where Freeman owns a home with his wife.

McFerrin said it appeared that Freeman’s car was airborne when it left the highway and landed in a ditch.

“They had to use the jaws of life to extract him from the vehicle,” McFerrin said. “He was lucid, conscious. He was talking, joking with some of the rescue workers at one point.”

McFerrin said bystanders converged on the scene trying to get a glimpse of the actor.

When one person tried to snap a photo with a cell phone camera, Freeman joked, “no freebies, no freebies,” McFerrin said.

Freeman won an Oscar for his role in “Million Dollar Baby.” His screen credits also include “The Shawshank Redemption,” ”Driving Miss Daisy” and “The Dark Knight,” now in theaters.

He was born in Memphis, Tenn., but spent much of his childhood in the Mississippi Delta. He is a co-owner of the Ground Zero Blues Club in Clarksdale.

The hospital where Freeman is being treated is commonly known as The Med, and is an acute-care teaching facility that serves patients within 150 miles of Memphis.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
Attorney Gordon Johnson
Past Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.