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Archive for the ‘dangerous roadway’ Category

Fog Blamed: Man Hit by Car While Pushing Disabled Vehicle on I-5

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011
Stockton Freeway Accident Lawyers

Heavy fog was a factor in a fatal accident on I-5 in Stockton. (Photo: KCRA News)

Heavy fog was cited as a factor in a fatal accident early Tuesday morning on Interstate 5 in Stockton. A man who was pushing a disabled car was struck and killed by another vehicle.

•  A man was pushing his disabled vehicle on the freeway in the heavy fog. There was no shoulder where he could pull over or walk to safety because of road construction.

•  Another car came up from behind at freeway speed and did not see the man because of the heavy fog. That car slammed into the man and his vehicle. 

•  The man died immediately. Police said fog was a factor but didn’t yet know if the driver also was at fault.

The deadly freeway crash occurred at about 3:30 a.m., according to a KCRA News report.

California Highway Patrol officer Troy Rivers said the fog was so thick that visibility was limited to about 100 feet at the time.

“At freeway speed, that’s a blink of an eye,” Rivers said.

A motorist called the CHP to report that a man who appeared to be in his 20s was pushing a disabled Chevrolet Malibu on southbound I-5 near March Lane, ABC Channel 10 News reported. There are no shoulders on that part of the freeway due to construction on the road.

As police were responding, a Honda Accord traveling about 60 mph slammed into the man and his car from the rear. The driver said that he did not see the man because of the dense fog. When he did see the man, the driver swerved to try to avoid hitting him but it was too late.

The man who was pushing the car died at the scene. CHP officers found him underneath his vehicle. They said he likely died immediately on impact.

CHP investigators said fog was definitely a factor in the accident, but they had not yet determined whether the Accord driver was at least partially at fault.

The lack of shoulders on the freeway also added to the dangerous road conditions because there was no place the victim could have moved his car or himself away from traffic.

Driving in Fog

“The best advice for driving in the fog is DON’T,” warns the California Department of Motor Vehicles handbook. The dangers of extremely reduced visibility warrant postponing any unnecessary trips. If you must drive in fog, however, the DMV handbook offers these tips:

  • Drive slowly.
  • Use your low-beam headlights. High-beam headlights will reflect back and cause glare.
  • Never drive with just your parking or fog lights.
  • Increase your following distance and be prepared to stop within the space you can see ahead.
  • Avoid crossing or passing lanes of traffic unless absolutely necessary.
  • Listen for traffic you cannot see.
  • Use your wipers and defroster as necessary for best vision.

If the fog becomes so thick that you can barely see, pull completely off the road. Turn off your lights and be sure to keep your foot off of the brake pedal or someone may see your taillights, think you are moving, and drive into your vehicle.

Stockton Freeway Accident Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented car accident victims and their families for 35 years. The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

Twin Teens Struck in Covina Crosswalk: One dead, one critical

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Fatal pedestrian accident: One of two twin 14-year-old girls who were struck in a Covina crosswalk earlier this week died Thursday in a Los Angeles hospital. Her sister is still in critical condition on Friday.

•   Twin 14-year-old sisters were walking to school Monday morning when they were struck by a car at an intersection without a traffic signal.

•   One of the girls died. The other is in critical condition.

•   Residents say the intersection is dangerous. They have asked local officials to install a traffic light but it has not been done. They say the will hold a vigil at the intersection until a light is installed.

The tragic accident occurred Monday at about 6:45 a.m., as the girls were walking to school, according to an earlier KTLA News report.

Leilani and Luana Fukui were crossing Lark Ellen Avenue at Tudor Street when they were hit by a 2007 Honda Civic. The vehicle, driven by a 30-year-old Newport Beach woman, was traveling at a speed of about 30 mph when it hit the two girls, who were in a crosswalk. The driver said she did not see the teens.

Both girls suffered catastrophic injuries.

Leilani Fukui was pronounced dead at 11 a.m. on Thursday at Los Angeles County USC Medical Center, hospital spokesperson Rosa Saca told the San Gabriel Valley Tribune. Her sister, Luana Fukui, was still in critical condition and fighting for her life.

No charges have been filed against the driver who hit the girls, California Highway Patrol officer Kerri Rivas said. The CHP investigation is ongoing.

Local residents blame the dangerous intersection.

“So many times, cars haven’t stopped,” crossing guard Irene Whitter told KTLA. “I’m out there in a big yellow jacket waving my sign and they don’t stop.”

Many residents say a traffic light would really help. Debbie Marin, who lives near the intersection, told the Tribune that she previously had asked local officials to install a light at the intersection, but they have not done so.

“I’m already angry that this has to happen, because I asked for this (traffic light) in the past. And now we have a death and one girl fighting for her life,” Marin said.

Marin said two representatives from County Supervisor Michael Antonovich’s office and two people from the public works department came to a vigil Thursday night, talked to residents, and observed the traffic.

Residents plan to continue their vigil at the intersection until a traffic light is installed, Marin said.

Covina Pedestrian Accident Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented pedestrian accident victims and their families for 35 years. The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

Van Plunges 50 Feet at Bakersfield Construction Site, Driver Killed

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Fatal car accident: A 20-year-old driver died Tuesday night after he ran a stop sign and his van plunged 50 feet down an embankment at a roadside construction site in Bakersfield.

•   Construction workers found a wrecked van with the driver’s dead body inside.

•   Police believe the 20-year-old driver failed to stop at a stop sign in a road construction zone and plunged off the edge of the roadway to a construction area below.

•   It is not known if the road conditions were unsafe due to the construction.

Police are not sure of the exact time of the accident but believe it happened late Tuesday night, according to a KERO News report.

California Highway Patrol officers said that a construction worker arrived at work Wednesday morning and discovered the wreckage. The worker looked inside the mangled van and found the body of Bakersfield resident Samuel Joseph Gonzalez.

CHP investigators believe Gonzalez was driving his 1997 Dodge van southbound on Allen Road at a speed that was too fast for the construction zone near Hageman Road.

Officers said Gonzales probably failed to stop at the stop sign on Hageman Road, crashed through a concrete barrier along the south edge of the roadway, and then continued on an unfinished road under construction.

The van went over the edge of the road and plunged 40 to 50 feet down to a construction area, where it crashed. Gonzales died in his van.

Officers did not say they suspected alcohol was a factor in the accident.

A local resident who commented on the KERO website said, “It’s just as likely that the construction zone was poorly marked and poorly lit. When quiting time comes, road crews throw together a patchwork of ‘safety’ measures and split. … Hazards are left unaddressed at the end of the working day.”

Investigators did not comment on any unsafe road conditions that may have existed as a result of the construction zone.

The fatal accident is under investigation.

Road Construction Accidents

More than 1,000 people are killed — and another 52,000 are injured — each year in highway construction zone accidents, Federal Highway Administrator Mary Peters told the Insurance Journal.

Four out of five of those fatalities are drivers and passengers, not highway workers, Peters said. California is second only to Texas in the number of highway construction zone fatalities, according to statistics from the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.

Peters said the number of deaths could be decreased by closing roads during construction when possible.

Bakersfield Car Accident Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented car accident victims and their families for 35 years. The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

San Jose: Ladders Left on Freeway Cause Fatal Motorcycle Accident

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

San Jose Motorcycle Accident Lawyers

A 28-year-old man was killed in a motorcycle accident Thursday night after he rode into some ladders that were strewn on a San Jose freeway and was thrown at a moving car.

•   A motorcyclist was traveling at freeway speed at night when he suddenly came upon a set of fiberglass ladders that had been strewn onto the freeway and were blocking two lanes.

•   The impact of the motorcycle hitting the ladders ejected the rider and threw him over two lanes, where he landed on the pavement in front of a moving car.

•   The car could not avoid hitting the motorcyclist. He died at the scene.

The fatal freeway accident occurred shortly before 11 p.m., according to an article  in the San Jose Mercury News.

The California Highway Patrol reported that 28-year-old Hoc Nguyen of San Jose was riding a 2009 Yamaha motorcycle in the fast lane of  southbound U.S. 101 at the time of the accident. He was traveling at a speed of around 70 mph, the CHP said. It was dark.

Just south of Metcalf road, Nguyen came up on a set of orange fiberglass ladders that had been dropped onto the freeway and were partially blocking his lane and the lane to the right, the CHP reported. Nguyen did not have time or room to avoid riding over the strewn ladders.

The impact of the motorcycle hitting the ladders threw Nguyen off of the bike and hurled him two lanes to the right, where he landed on the pavement directly in front of an oncoming 2000 Honda, driven by a 63-year-old Gilroy man. The Honda struck the motorcyclist and then stayed at the scene, according to a report in the Gilroy Dispatch.

A witness stopped and dragged Nguyen over to the shoulder of the freeway. The witness administered CPR before San Jose police officers arrived and continued to try to revive the victim, the CHP reported. Unfortunately the motorcyclist did not survive his injuries. He was pronounced dead at 11:10 p.m., the CHP said.

The Honda driver was not injured. No arrests were made.

Officials closed southbound U.S. 101 traffic lanes for about an hour while they cleared the scene and collected evidence, including the orange ladders. CHP officer S. Parra urged anyone with information about the two orange fiberglass ladders and how or when they were left on the freeway to call the California HIghway Patrol at 408-848-2324.

Litter Causes Deadly Accidents

Litter is responsible for thousands of accidents on California roadways every year, according to the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans).

In 2007 alone, Caltrans collected more than 140,000 cubic yards of trash — enough to fill a hole 1 mile long, 25-feet wide and nearly 30-feet deep.

The CHP has said that litter is not only a serious blight on the landscape, but a traffic safety issue and a threat to public safety. A state program called Don’t Trash California reported that Caltrans alone spends more than $41 million tax dollars every year — $55 million in 2007 alone — to collect and dispose of items carelessly dumped onto freeways and roads. The combined annual cost to all public agencies in California for litter prevention, clean up and disposal is $375.2 million.

Research indicates that litter comes from seven primary sources: pedestrians, drivers, household garbage cans, commercial dumpsters, construction sites, loading docks and uncovered trucks.

Litter not only makes freeways unsafe, but also travels into storm drains where it can soak into groundwater and can flow into canals and streams as well as lakes, rivers and the ocean.

San Jose Motorcycle Accident Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented motorcycle accident victims and their families for 35 years. The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

Napa Car Accident Lawyers | Downed Tree Crushes SUV, Killing Driver

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011
Napa Car Accident Attorneys
A tree that cracked and fell in a storm crushed a man’s car and killed him. (Video captures: ABC News)

Rainstorms proved deadly in Napa on Saturday night when a tree blew over in the wind and crushed an SUV, killing a driver on his way to work.

•   A man was on his way to work on a back road when heavy rain and wind toppled a 6-foot-diameter oak tree.

•   The tree crashed down onto the man’s SUV and completely crushed it.

•   The man died instantly.

The accident occurred at about 10:20 p.m., the Napa Valley Register reported.

California Highway Patrol officer Jaret Paulson said 56-year-old Alex Naglal of Vallejo was driving northbound on South Kelly Road, south of Highway 12, when the huge oak tree came crashing down on his 1997 Chevy Suburban.   The impact stopped the SUV and completely crushed it. The tree was 6 feet in diameter, according to an ABC News report.

Naglal was killed instantly.

“It was just terrible timing and again, terrible weather, heavy winds, heavy rains and just a bad combination of events that led up to this tragedy,” Paulson said.

When Naglal was struck dead, he was only about a mile from the Collotype Label Company, where he was due for his overnight shift making wine labels. His sister, who works the same shift, had passed by the accident on her way to work but didn’t realize the victim was her brother. When he didn’t show up for his shift, she feared he had been hurt and went back to the scene to check. There she discovered he had been killed.

The storm that knocked down that tree also felled many others, according to CalFire Captain Joe Petersen. There were 34 tree-related emergencies that same night, Peterson said.  Sixteen of the fallen trees knocked down power lines across Napa County to fall, leaving hundreds of households without power until late Sunday or early Monday, PG&E spokesperson J.D. Guidi said.

The rainstorm flooded the intersection of Silverado Trail and Yountville Cross Road, Petersen said. The water level overflowed the river bank and was being monitored as it approached nearby homes. The water level crested at 23 feet, Petersen said.

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented car accident injury victims for 35 years.  The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

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