Category Archives: US

Pacoima plane crash: Video shows moments Metrolink train slams into small plane that crashed on its tracks

PACOIMA, LOS ANGELES (KABC) — Shocking video shows the moment a Metrolink train slammed into a small plane that crashed on its tracks in Pacoima on Sunday.

It happened blocks away from the Los Angeles Police Department’s Foothill station on Osborne Street, near the Whiteman Airport.

The pilot was the sole occupant onboard, and was pulled from the aircraft – moments before the train came crashing in. The Los Angeles Police Department posted body camera footage of the incident as it was unfolding showing the officers pulling the pilot to safety.

According to a tweet posted by the LAPD Valley Bureau, the plane had lost power and crashed onto the tracks.

The pilot was taken to the hospital in an unknown condition. No other injuries were reported.

The damaged plane remained on or near Metrolink Antelope Valley line train tracks, and all train movement was restricted in that area, the LAFD added. One or more lanes of San Fernando Road and Osborne Street were closed in the area while crews investigated the crash and conducted cleanup operations.

The incident remains under investigation.

City News Service, Inc. contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2022 KABC Television, LLC. All rights reserved.



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Father Jacob Whaley’s body found days after he tried walking home in snowstorm

A Virgina man who tried to walk home in a snowstorm last Monday after he crashed his car was found dead three days later, a report said.

The body of Jacob Whaley, 34, was discovered by a search party Thursday about 200 yards from the location in Louisa where his family had told authorities he may have been after he first disappeared, WRIC reported.

Whaley was trying to walk the six-mile distance to his home in the wintry conditions, the report said.

When he stopped responding and never made it home, his relatives alerted the sheriff’s office and reported Whaley could’ve possibly been near Greene’s Corner Road.

Deputies responded to the site, but did not initially find him.

Whaley’s relatives said police should have found him alive.

“I’m so angry with this county,” Whaley’s mother, Shannon Whaley, told the news outlet.

“All they had to do was go out and holler for him.”

The man’s sister, Angela Whaley, added: “Louisa County let him freeze to death.”

The Louisa County Sheriff’s Office issued a statement mourning Whaley’s death.

“Our heartfelt condolences go out to the family and friends of Mr. Jacob Whaley,” the office said.

“Missing Persons cases are always a top priority for the Louisa County Sheriff’s Office and we share in their grief and sorrow.”

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Bronx apartment fire kills 19, including 9 children

NEW YORK (AP) — A malfunctioning space heater sparked a fire that filled a high-rise Bronx apartment building with thick smoke Sunday morning, killing 19 people including nine children in New York City’s deadliest blaze in three decades.

Trapped residents broke windows for air and stuffed wet towels under doors as smoke rose from a lower-floor apartment where the fire started. Survivors told of fleeing in panic down darkened hallways and stairs, barely able to breathe.

Multiple limp children were seen being given oxygen after they were carried out. Evacuees had faces covered in soot.

Firefighters found victims on every floor, many in cardiac and respiratory arrest, said Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro. Some could not escape because of the volume of smoke, he said.

Some residents said they initially ignored wailing smoke alarms because false alarms were so common in the 120-unit building, built in the early 1970s as affordable housing.

More than five dozen people were hurt and 13 were hospitalized in critical condition. Nigro said most of the victims had severe smoke inhalation.

Firefighters continued making rescues even after their air supplies ran out, Mayor Eric Adams said.

“Their oxygen tanks were empty and they still pushed through the smoke,” Adams said.

Investigators said the fire, triggered by the electric heater, started in a duplex apartment on the second and third floors of the 19-story building.

The flames didn’t spread far — only charring the one unit and an adjacent hallway. But the door to the apartment and a door to a stairwell had been left open, letting smoke quickly spread throughout the building, Nigro said.

New York City fire codes generally require apartment doors to be spring-loaded and slam shut automatically, but it was not immediately clear whether this building was covered by those rules.

Building resident Sandra Clayton grabbed her dog Mocha and ran for her life when she saw the hallway fill with smoke and heard people screaming, “Get out! Get out!”

Clayton, 61, said she groped her way down a darkened stairway, clutching Mocha. The smoke was so black she couldn’t see, but she could hear neighbors wailing and crying nearby.

“I just ran down the steps as much as I could but people was falling all over me, screaming,” Clayton recounted from a hospital where she was treated for smoke inhalation.

In the commotion, her dog slipped from her grasp and was later found dead in the stairwell.

About 200 firefighters responded to the building on East 181st Street around 11 a.m.

Jose Henriquez, an immigrant from the Dominican Republic who lives on the 10th floor, said the building’s fire alarms would frequently go off, but would turn out to be false.

“It seems like today, they went off but the people didn’t pay attention,” Henriquez said in Spanish.

He and his family stayed, wedging a wet towel beneath the door once they realized the smoke in the halls would overpower them if they tried to flee.

Luis Rosa said he also initially thought it was a false alarm. By the time he opened the door of his 13th-floor apartment, the smoke was so thick he couldn’t see down the hallway. “So I said, OK, we can’t run down the stairs because if we run down the stairs, we’re going to end up suffocating.”

“All we could do was wait,” he said.

The children who died were 16 years old or younger, said Stefan Ringel, a senior adviser to the mayor. Adams said at a news conference that many residents were originally from the West African nation of Gambia. Many survivors were brought to temporary shelter in a nearby school.

The drab, brown apartment building looms over an intersection of smaller, aging brick buildings on Webster Avenue, one of the Bronx’s main thoroughfares.

By Sunday afternoon, all that remained visible of the unit where the fire started was a gaping black hole where the windows had been smashed.

“There’s no guarantee that there’s a working fire alarm in every apartment, or in every common area,” U.S. Rep. Ritchie Torres, a Democrat who represents the area, told the AP. “Most of these buildings have no sprinkler system. And so the housing stock of the Bronx is much more susceptible to devastating fires than most of the housing stock in the city.”

Nigro and Torres both compared the fire’s severity to a 1990 blaze at the Happy Land social club where 87 people were killed when a man set fire to the building after getting into an argument with his former girlfriend and being thrown out of the Bronx club.

Sunday’s death toll was the highest for a fire in the city since the Happy Land fire, other than the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

It was also the deadliest fire at a U.S. residential apartment building in years. In 2017, 13 people died in an apartment building, also in the Bronx, according to data from the National Fire Protection Association.

That fire started with a 3-year-old boy playing with stove burners and also spread because the door to an apartment that lacked a closing mechanism had been left open. The fire led to several changes in New York City, including having the fire department create fire safety education plans for children and parents.

Sunday’s fire happened just days after 12 people, including eight children, were killed in a house fire in Philadelphia. In 1989, a Tennessee apartment building fire claimed the lives of 16 people.

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Associated Press reporters Michael R. Sisak and Jennifer Peltz in New York and Andrew Selsky in Salem, Oregon, contributed to this report.

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Novak Djokovic’s Court Hearing Over Australian Visa and COVID-19 Vaccine Plagued by Technical Difficulties

A hearing over Novak Djokovic’s legal challenge to the Australian government has been marred by the livestream breaking down several times and an unknown person who, seemingly by accident, joined the call and began talking over the proceedings. The tennis superstar, 34, is contesting Australia’s decision to revoke his entry visa over his unvaccinated status. But his attempts to do so Monday were delayed by technical issues, as the live feed set up for the public to watch crashed, apparently overwhelmed. In one instance, the stream was down for over 20 minutes. “I regret to inform you that the feed has died again,” wrote a journalist providing live updates on the trial for The Guardian. Less than an hour into the hearing, an unnamed guest joined in on the call, and a male voice exclaimed, “We’re in!” After Judge Anthony Kelly issued a stern admonishment, calling the behavior “utterly unacceptable” and insisting outside parties mute themselves, the unknown interloper promptly dropped out of the hearing.

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At Least 19 Dead, Including 9 Children in NYC Bronx Fire: Live Updates

Credit…David Dee Delgado for The New York Times

Wesley Patterson was in the bathroom just before 11 a.m. on Sunday when his girlfriend knocked on the door to say that she saw flames coming out of another unit.

It took only moments for the apartment to fill with smoke, said Mr. Patterson, who has lived in the building for 20 years.

“We were just trying to breathe,” Mr. Patterson, 28, said. He rushed with his girlfriend and her brother, who lives with the couple, to a back window.

He tried to open it but the frame was so hot that he burned his hands. When he got the window open, he started screaming to firefighters who were helping a family in apartment 3M. The firefighters couldn’t get to them just yet, he said.

Mr. Patterson said he had to keep opening and shutting the window to keep smoke from pouring in as he called for help.

“I was yelling, ‘Please help me! Please come get us!’” he said.

The family tried to open the door, but the apartment flooded with even more smoke.

“I was thinking about my son, and I was wondering if I was ever going to see him again,” Mr. Patterson said.

It was around 11:20 a.m. that Mr. Patterson said he and his family were pulled out of the window by firefighters.

“I’m glad we made it out safe, but I still can’t believe it happened,” he said.

Dana Nicole Campbell, 47, was at a nearby park, working as a groundskeeper for the city, when one of her four teenage children called to say that smoke was coming into their apartment on the third floor. Ms. Campbell said she told them to put damp towels by the foot of the door to prevent more smoke from entering the apartment, and to barricade themselves inside the apartment.

Then she raced to the building and got there in time to see her children jump out of a third-floor window. They landed on a mattress and garbage bags that people had put there as a makeshift landing pad. Later, Ms. Campbell said she was grateful her children were unharmed.

“You can be here tomorrow with broken legs,” she said. “You can’t be here tomorrow with smoke inhalation.”

Firefighters helped Cristal Diaz escape with her two aunts, aged 49 and 65, and three cousins from their smoke-filled apartment on the 15th floor. Ms. Diaz, who moved from the Dominican Republic two years ago, took only her phone and identification with her when she left. “We don’t know what to do right now, and tomorrow I’m supposed to work,” said Ms. Diaz, who works as a cashier. The family is currently staying with friends.

Ms. Diaz said she was drinking coffee, as she does every morning, when the disaster struck.

“I thought, ‘Is this going to be the last time I enjoy coffee with my family?’ Ms. Diaz, 27, recalled, still in shock.

Members of the Wague family stood on the corner of Tiebout Avenue and Folin Street, huddled together, some under a blanket, after escaping their third-floor apartment.

Mamadou Wague was awakened by one of his children. “I get up, and there’s smoke in the kids’ rooms,” Mr. Wague, 47, said.

As the family rushed out of the apartment, one of Mr. Wague’s children cried that their sister, Nafisha, 8, was missing. Mr. Wague sprinted to her room and found her sitting on her bed, screaming, he said. Mr. Wague grabbed her and ran out.

Ahouss Balima, 20, lived on the ninth floor of the building, along with his three younger sisters and parents. He and his family had been asleep on Sunday morning when he was awakened by the sound of someone screaming for help.

Mr. Balima went to wake up his family, and they rushed downstairs, only to be told by firefighters on the 6th floor that they couldn’t go down any further because it was too dangerous.

After eventually being rescued by firefighters, one of his sisters was taken to a hospital, and she was still in critical condition on Sunday night.

By 3:30 p.m., the fire was under control, and a faint smell of smoke lingered in the air. Several residents stood nearby. Some wore sneakers, others had winter coats, and a few had blankets wrapped around their shoulders. A few people huddled under nearby scaffolding to escape the biting wind. Several held their phones close to their faces to assure concerned family members that they were alive.

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Bronx apartment building fire leaves 19 people dead, including 9 children

The blaze sent 32 people to hospitals with life-threatening conditions, Daniel Nigro, commissioner of the New York City Fire Department, said earlier Sunday. A total of 63 people were injured.

A “malfunctioning electric space heater” was the source of the fire, Nigro said during a press conference. The heater was in the bedroom of an apartment, and the fire consumed the room and then the entire apartment, he said.

The apartment door was left open and smoke spread throughout the building when the residents left their unit, Nigro said.

“This is a horrific, horrific, painful moment for the city of New York, and the impact of this fire is going to really bring a level of just pain and despair in our city,” Adams said.

About 200 members of the New York City Fire Department responded to the fire at the 19-story building at 333 East 181st Street. The fire began a little before 11 a.m. in a duplex apartment on the 2nd and 3rd floors of the building, the FDNY said.

Firefighters were met by “very heavy smoke, very heavy fire” in the hallways.

Victims were found in stairways on every floor of the building, many in cardiac arrest, in what Nigro said could be an unprecedented loss of life. The injuries were predominantly from smoke inhalation, he said.

Firefighters kept attempting to save people from the building despite running out of air tank, Nigro said. Some of the residents who were trying to leave the building could not “escape because of the volume of smoke.”

The FDNY posted several images of the scene showing ladders extending into apartment windows as well as a number of broken windows.

“This is going to be one of the worst fires that we have witnessed during modern times here in the city of New York,” Adams said.

“I am horrified by the devastating fire in the Bronx today,” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said on Twitter. “My heart is with the loved ones of all those we’ve tragically lost, all of those impacted and with our heroic FDNY firefighters. The entire State of New York stands with New York City.”

The residential apartment where the fire occurred is 50 years old and has 120 units, according to building records.

There have not been any major building violations or complaints listed against the building, according to city building records. Past minor violations were rectified by the property and there were no structural violations listed.

Apartment fire impacts Muslim and immigrant community

The building where the fire occurred housed a largely Muslim population, Adams said, with many immigrants from Gambia, a small nation on the east coast of Africa.

The mayor said that one priority will be to make sure that Islamic funeral and burial rites are respected. Another will be to seek Muslim leaders to connect with residents.

The names of people who request government assistance will not be turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Adams added.

“We want people to be comfortable in coming forward, and it’s imperative that we connect with those on the ground to make sure they get that message and that word out,” Adams said.

Christina Farrell, first deputy commissioner of NYC emergency management, told CNN’s Phil Mattingly Sunday that residents who lived in the apartment building are now being housed at a middle school next door.

“We have all the residents here. We’ve been able to give them food, a warm space, water, any short-term needs that they had. People brought their pets and so we are in the process of finding people shelter this evening,” Farrell said. “We work with the Red Cross, we have hotel rooms and have other resources available. And so we will be making sure every family has a safe, warm space to sleep in tonight.”

A service center will be set up Monday, Farrell said.

“We’ll be hopeful that many of them will be able to go back into their apartment in the coming days,” she said. “But for the people that are out long-term, we will work with them and the state to get them appropriate housing.”

Hochul, appearing at a press conference Sunday, said she met with survivors of the fire, including a mother who was her family’s sole survivor.

“It’s impossible to go into that room, where scores of families who are in such grief, who are in pain, and to see it in the mother’s eyes as I held her, who lost her entire family,” she said.

As she prepares her new budget this week, Hochul said she will establish a compensation fund to help provide the victims of the fire with money for housing, burial costs and other necessities.

“Tonight is a night of tragedy and pain, and tomorrow we begin to rebuild,” Hochul said. “We rebuild their lives and give them hope, especially those who came all the way from Africa [from] Gambia in search of a better life right here in this great borough of the Bronx.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer also spoke at the conference and said numerous forms of assistance are being examined on the federal level and will include housing and tax assistance as well as and immigration assistance, “so families can be reunited.”

CNN’s Brynn Gingras contributed to this report.

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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez tests positive for COVID-19

New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has tested positive for COVID-19 and is recovering at home – just over a week since she was spotted partying without a mask in Florida, her office said on Sunday.

“Representative Ocasio-Cortez has received a positive test result for COVID-19. She is experiencing symptoms and recovering at home,” the statement said.

“The Congresswoman received her booster shot this fall, and encourages everyone to get their booster and follow all CDC guidance.”

The lefty Dem’s positive test result comes just over a week after she was spotted maskless enjoying drinks with her boyfriend while on vacation in Miami as omicron cases soared across the nation.

The progressive “Squad” member was photographed with boyfriend Riley Roberts sitting outside at the Doraku Izakaya and Sushi restaurant on Dec. 30, sipping a cocktail and checking her phone.

AOC’s maskless winter getaway was criticized on social media by supporters of Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has taken a strong anti-mask stance.

“Welcome to Florida, AOC! We hope you’re enjoying a taste of freedom here in the Sunshine State thanks to @RonDeSantisFL’s leadership,” read a post from the Team DeSantis Twitter account in response to the photo.

AOC embraces Billy Porter with a hug maskless.
jacob_lanoux/Instagram

The Sunshine State’s lieutenant governor Jeanette Núñez also chimed in, writing, “@AOC’s New York state of mind clearly doesn’t mind being in the free state of Florida…mask free of course.”

Former White House press secretary and Florida native Kayleigh McEnany tweeted that AOC’s travel choice was “interesting.”

“I guess she enjoys the freedom-loving utopia of Florida over her mandate-ridden New York!” added McEnany, now a co-host on the Fox News midday show “Outnumbered.”

Ocasio-Cortez shot back at the Team DeSantis tweet the following day, writing: “Hasn’t Gov. DeSantis been inexplicably missing for like 2 weeks? If he’s around, I would be happy to say hello. His social media team seems to have been posting old photos for weeks. In the meantime, perhaps I could help with local organizing. Folks are quite receptive here :)”

AOC dances maskless at Miami Drag Queen bar.
Brendon Leslie/FCV

“I’d also be happy to share some notes from @GovKathyHochul’s work in NY since he seems to be in need of tips!” she added in another tweet.

She also fired back at former Donald Trump campaign adviser Steve Cortes, who called out Roberts for “showing his gross pale male feet in public (not at a pool/beach) with hideous sandals,” as seen in the photo.

“If Republicans are mad they can’t date me they can just say that instead of projecting their sexual frustrations onto my boyfriend’s feet,” AOC wrote. “Ya creepy weirdos.”

The Congresswomen reproached Texas Senator Ted Cruz in February after he took a family vacation to Cancun while his state experienced a deadly winter storm that knocked out power to millions and left 23 dead.

“If Sen. Cruz had resigned back in January after helping gin up a violent insurrection that killed several people, he could’ve taken his vacation in peace,” she tweeted at the time. “Texans should continue to demand his resignation.”  

DeSantis taunted AOC in a press conference last week when he was asked about her trip.

“If I had a dollar for every lockdown politician who decided to escape to Florida over the last two years, I’d be a pretty doggone wealthy man, let me tell ya,” DeSantis, 43, said



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Family member forced boy, 6, into cold shower as punishment, relatives hid body in Indiana: prosecutors – Chicago Tribune

  1. Family member forced boy, 6, into cold shower as punishment, relatives hid body in Indiana: prosecutors Chicago Tribune
  2. ‘He’s not replaceable’: 6-year-old boy found dead; mother, siblings charged ABC 7 Chicago
  3. 3 family members taken into custody, charged after death of missing 6-year-old: police WGN News
  4. Damari Perry case: Horrifying details released about boy’s last day, mom and brother charged with murder FOX 32 Chicago
  5. Damari Perry family, Jannie M. Perry and Jeremiah R. Perry, tried to punish him before death, hiding body in Gary: prosecutors WLS-TV
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Bronx fire: At least 19 dead, including 9 children, in massive fire at NYC apartment; 63 hurt in total: sources

TREMONT, Bronx (WABC) — At least 19 people are dead, including nine children, in a catastrophic fire that broke out at a high-rise apartment building in the Bronx Sunday, officials said.

About 200 firefighters were battling the five-alarm fire that started in a duplex apartment on the third floor of a 19-story high-rise building at 333 East 181st Street in the Tremont section of the Bronx just before 11 a.m. Sunday.

Sources tell ABC News that investigators are focusing on a space heater as a cause of the deadly fire.

At least 63 people were injured, with 32 sustaining “life-threatening” injuries and 13 “clinging to their lives” in nearby hospitals, according to FDNY Commissioner Daniel Nigro. The predominant injury for the 32 victims was severe smoke inhalation.

Nigro says he expected “numerous fatalities.”

“This is going to be one of the worst fires we have witnessed here in modern times in the city of New York,” New York City Mayor Eric Adams said at the press conference.

RELATED | 8 children among 12 dead in large Philadelphia house fire, officials say

Eyewitness News spoke with the man who lived in the apartment where the fire started.

“We was sleeping and then my kids were screaming saying fire, fire,” Mamadou Wague said.

The fire started in Wague’s third floor duplex, where he lives with his wife and eight kids, one of whom was trapped on a burning bed.

Wague has burns on his nose from when he leapt through the flames to rescue his daughter, who is burned but alive.

Firefighters arrived on site three minutes after the initial fire call and were met with fire in the hallway of the building.

Victims were found in the stairwells, according to the commissioner, as smoke extended the height of the building.

Residents described the events that unfolded as “traumatizing” as they escaped from the building during the fire.

RELATED | Operation 7: Save a life fire safety tips and links

“It was a lot of smoke so we had to stop at the sixth floor and we were able to get into a neighbor’s home. We stayed there until the firefighters came and they were able to guide us out,” apartment resident Fatima said.

Nigro noted that a door was left open, which allowed the fire and smoke to spread.

The 32 injured were transported to five different hospitals in the Bronx.

In total, at least 63 people were injured from the fire, including: 32 people with life threatening injuries, 9 people in serious condition and 22 people with non-life threatening injuries.

RELATED | NYC’s four deadliest fires since 1990 have all been in the Bronx

New York Governor Kathy Hochul says she is “horrified by the devastating fire.”

She added, “My heart is with the loved ones of all those we’ve tragically lost, all of those impacted and with our heroic FDNY firefighters. The entire state of New York stands with New York City.”

Citizen App video shows flames shooting out of the building.

Dramatic pictures posted to social media show fire gushing out of multiple windows in the building.

The fire has since been put out.

An investigation is underway but the fire commissioner says the fire is not suspicious.

Department of Building inspectors are currently on scene to conduct structural stability inspections throughout the building and assist with the ongoing investigation.

This was the second major fire in the Bronx over the weekend. A four-alarm fire in the Fordham Heights section of the Bronx that began early Saturday morning injured a firefighter and displaced three families.

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3 Injured as Cobblestone Ale House Burns – NBC Boston

Two firefighters and one occupant were injured in a massive fire that destroyed a popular restaurant in Keene, New Hampshire, Saturday night.

Around 10 p.m. Saturday, the Keene Fire Department said they were called to a report of a fire in the kitchen at Cobblestone Ale House on Main Street. When they arrived, flames could be soon shooting from the left side of the building.

There were three occupants on the second floor. Two escaped on their own. The third was rescued and taken to Cheshire Medical Center. An update on their condition was not immediately known.

Around 10:23 p.m., a firefighter who was inside the building became disorientated. A mayday was transmitted, and the firefighter was found shortly thereafter and removed from the building.

By this time, the fire had extended up to the second floor and into the attic. Additional fire crews were called in to help extinguish the fire and search for any victims.

Two firefighters suffered burns and were taken to Cheshire Medical Center, but were released a short time later.

Fire officials said the building was a total loss, with damage estimated at over $1 million.

Firefighters determined the cause of the blaze was a grease fire that happened after a fryolator exploded. Smoke detectors in the building were found to have working, which alerted occupants to the fire.

Authorities closed the area around the business on Sunday morning because of the fire. The owner of the ale house said it was fortunate the fire did not happen on a spring night when the bar would have been more crowded.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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