MICHAEL O. ALLEN

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Motor Vehicle Accident

TRUCK JUMPS GUARDRAIL; Motorist Hurt

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Wednesday, May 6, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | B04

A 39-year-old River Edge man was in critical but stable condition Tuesday night with head trauma and internal injuries after a tractor trailer careened out of control and crashed into three cars, including a state police cruiser.

Alexander Belkind was pinned inside his car after the trailer jumped the guardrail on the New Jersey Turnpike and went into oncoming traffic. After part of his mangled car was cut away, he was taken by state police helicopter to the University Hospital in Newark, said Sgt. Dan Cosgrove, a spokesman for the state police.

A trooper and two other motorists who were injured were treated and released.

The trailer, driven by William Arthur Parson of Virginia, was southbound about 8:30 p.m. Monday in the turnpike’s western extension in Kearny when it struck a truck tire and rim lying in the roadway, Cosgrove said.

The trailer then struck a southbound pickup truck driven by James Farrell, 28, of Bayonne, spinning the pickup around and turning it over several times. Before the pickup truck came to a rest, it had sideswiped a trooper car, which was parked behind a disabled vehicle in the left lane.

The tractor trailer, owned by Great Coastal Express Inc. of South Holland, Ill., skidded across the southbound lanes, the median, the center guardrail, and into the northbound lanes where it crashed into Belkind’s car.

Trooper Darryl Humphrey had moderate injuries to his left elbow and forearm, Farrell’s left collarbone was fractured, and Parson injured his elbow.

ID: 17376360 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

TWO DRIVERS HOSPITALIZED AFTER COLLISION

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By MICHAEL O. ALLEN | Thursday, April 23, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 5 Star | NEWS | B05

The drivers of two cars that collided head-on in Mahwah were hospitalized in stable condition Wednesday.

Edward Blust of Garrison Court, Mahwah, was being treated at Good Samaritan Hospital in Suffern, N.Y., and Robert Scotto, 36, of Brooklyn was at the University Hospital in Newark, spokesmen for the hospitals said.

Scotto’s car crossed the center lines on Route 202 at 5:35 p.m. Tuesday and crashed into Blust’s auto, according to a statement from Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy.

Blust, 29, and Scotto suffered head injuries. Scotto also suffered severe leg injuries.
No summons was issued and the investigation was continuing.

ID: 17375166 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

FIVE INJURED WHEN DRIVER CRASHES CAR INTO TREE

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Sunday, March 29, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | A05

Authorities are trying to determine what caused a 20-year-old borough man to lose control of a car he was driving and crash into a tree, injuring himself and his four passengers, Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy said Saturday.

Doug Brino of 702 Shawnee Drive, the driver, was being treated for unspecified injuries Saturday at The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood. A 16-year-old girl sitting behind him and a 17-year-old girl next to her were also being treated at the hospital, Fahy said.

The front-seat passenger, a 15-year-old girl, and Brian Matos of 1173 Valley Road, Wayne, the owner of the car, were taken to University Hospital in Newark by helicopter.

A University Hospital spokeswoman said Matos was released Saturday but declined to release information on his companion because of her age.

A Valley Hospital supervisor said Brino and one girl were treated and released, but that the other girl was admitted in serious condition. She declined to say which girl it was.

The crash occurred about 9:40 p.m. Friday on a darkened bend of McCoy Road, Fahy said.

Fahy said none of the car occupants wore their seat belts and that investigators found a half-empty bottle of vodka underneath the front seat of the car. No charges had been filed in the case.

ID: 17372794 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

2 HAWTHORNE TEENS STILL IN HOSPITAL INJURED IN WEATHER-RELATED CRASH

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By Michael O. Allen and Gregory Beals, Record Staff Writers | Wednesday, March 18, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | 4 Star | NEWS | B03

Two Hawthorne teenagers remained hospitalized from injuries in what police say was a weather-related, head-on collision in the village last week.

Edward Mullins III, 17, the driver of one of the cars, was in fair condition at Hackensack Medical Center on Tuesday, a spokeswoman said.

His passenger and classmate at Hawthorne High School, Corinne Dockray, 14, was in stable condition in the surgical intensive care unit with head injuries at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in Newark, a spokesman said. A helicopter took Dockray to the hospital after the accident on March 11, police said.

Two of Mullins other passengers, and the driver of the other car and her passenger, suffered minor injuries. Treated at The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood and released were Patrick Murphy, 17, and Allison Taylor, 14, both of whom were riding in Mullins car; Judith M. De Boer, 42, the driver of the other car; and Kirk De Boer, whose age and relationship to Judith De Boer were unavailable.

Murphy and Mullins have been friends since the age of 7, when they began playing football together, said Theresa Murphy, mother of Patrick Murphy. Both are members of the Hawthorne High School football team. Mullins is a halfback, Murphy an outside linebacker.

Murphy suffered a few abrasions to the face and required a few stiches, his mother said, adding that he was in shock after the accident and was deeply concerned about Mullins.

“It was very upsetting,” said Theresa Murphy, a 17-year Hawthorne resident. “He didn’t go to school for two days. He’s been at his buddy’s all the time.”

Mullins father, Edward Mullins, said: “My family, my friends, and my faith have kept me going. We are very, very positive right now.”

Students at Hawthorne High School have been kept advised of the condition of their injured classmates. One student said announcements have been made over the public address system.

Mullins had been traveling eastbound on Godwin Avenue about 6:45 p.m. last Wednesday when his car moved into the path of oncoming traffic and struck De Boer’s car at a bend in the road, according to the police report.

Ridgewood Police Capt. Louis Mader on Tuesday attributed the accident to the weather, saying it had snowed and there was a patch of ice in the roadway where the accident occurred.

Richard Sperito, the assistant superintendent of schools in Hawthorne, said: “Unfortunately, I think a lot of times when this happens we say, `Oh, they were speeding, or `Oh, they were drinking. But that was not the case here. It could have happened to you or me.”

Correction: Allison Taylor, one of the six Hawthorne residents injured last week in an accident in Ridgewood, remained in the hospital Friday and was in good condition, a hospital spokeswoman said. A story in Wednesday’s editions said she had been released from the hospital. Also, the name of one of the injured was misspelled. She is Corin Dockray. (PUBLISHED, SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1992, PAGE a02.)

ID: 17371731 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

BOGOTA MAN DIES IN CAR CRASH

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MICHAEL O. ALLEN | Sunday, March 15, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | A06

A 29-year-old Bogota man apparently lost control of his car and crashed into a light pole base just off the George Washington Bridge before dawn Saturday, killing himself and injuring his passenger.

Peter J. LaSala was pronounced dead at the scene by Englewood Hospital paramedics, said Terry Benczik, a Port Authority spokeswoman. John Leahy Jr., also of Bogota, suffered facial cuts and possible internal injuries, she said.

LaSala was the driver and Leahy his passenger as they returned to New Jersey about 4:30 a.m., Benczik said. The car struck the concrete base of a light pole near the Center Avenue overpass as the car traveled westbound on the lower level of the bridge, Benczik said.

Leahy, who was taken to Englewood Hospital, told investigators he had his eyes closed and did not see how the accident occurred, Benczik said. The pavement was dry, there was no construction nearby, and no evident reason for the accident, she said.

LaSala worked in the parts department for Ford-Lincoln-Mercury in New York City.
His funeral is to be Wednesday.

Notes: Bergen page

ID: 17371515 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

CRASH KILLS ONE, INJURES THREE; Teen in Stolen Car Dies Fleeing Police

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By David Gibson and Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writers | Wednesday, March 11, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | B01

A car theft in Paterson ended tragically in Elmwood Park near midnight Monday when the stolen car, driven by an unlicensed driver who had arrived from Puerto Rico four months ago, tried to elude pursuing police and slammed head-on into a car driven by a Garfield woman.

The driver of the stolen car, 19-year-old Manuel Cardona, was killed on the spot, and his two teenage passengers were badly injured. The Garfield woman, Sophie Soltys, 45, of Summit Avenue, also was seriously injured, authorities said.

Soltys suffered head injuries and bruised ribs and was listed in stable condition in the intensive care unit of St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Paterson, where the two other survivors were taken.

A 14-year-old passenger in the stolen car was in stable condition in the pediatric intensive care unit with multiple trauma. A 16-year-old passenger was on life-support, said Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy.

Cardona, who was driving the steel-gray 1986 Hyundai, was pronounced dead at 12:06 a.m. at the River Drive and Summit Avenue accident scene, Fahy said.

Fahy, whose office is investigating the crash along with the Clifton and Elmwood Park police departments, said the Clifton and Elmwood Park police officers who chased the teenagers followed state guidelines regarding pursuits.

Police said Cardona had arrived in Paterson from Puerto Rico with his family two months ago and was not licensed to drive in New Jersey. He was living with relatives at 163 Redwood Ave. His family said Cardona had never been in trouble before.

The chase, which covered about two miles at speeds approaching 60 mph, came after a surveillance that began in Clifton about 11:40 p.m. Monday, said city Detective Capt. James Territo. He gave the following account:

Patrolmen Warren Lee and Pat Ciser, who was behind the wheel of their squad car, were parked at Randolph and Knapp avenues when the Hyundai passed them on Randolph Avenue moving toward Passaic. The officers began to follow. Noticing that the passengers were behaving nervously, they decided to check the police computer to see if the Hyundai was stolen.

The officers continued to follow as the car proceeded at the speed limit to Parker and Ackerman avenues. There, it abruptly made an illegal left-hand turn from the right-hand lane and headed over the bridge above the Passaic River, and into Garfield.

The car went north on River Road toward Elmwood Park, with the Clifton officers still following. At that moment, the officers were able to confirm that the car had been stolen in Paterson.

The officers then decided to pull the car over and issue a summons for the illegal turn made earlier.

“They activated their lights and, `Boom, the car takes off,” recounted Territo. The Clifton car gave chase and put out a bulletin for area departments to watch for the vehicle.

As the cars passed into Elmwood Park at Market Street and River Road, Elmwood Park Patrolwoman Debra Lysiak joined the pursuit. Two blocks later the car Cardona was driving sped up, police reports said, and went airborne as it hit a rise at a railroad crossing by River Drive and Summit Avenue. It was 11:53 p.m.

“As it came down on the pavement, the driver seemed to lose control,” said Elmwood Park Police Chief Byron Morgan II. “He veered into the oncoming traffic and hit a car in the southbound lane.” The car was a 1986 Oldsmobile driven by Soltys.

The fire department had to use the “jaws of life” to extricate the drivers of both the Oldsmobile and the Hyundai.”

Police said the Clifton patrol car was about 150 feet behind the Hyundai, followed immediatley by the the Elmwood Park police car, when the crash occurred.

No charges have been filed in the case.

Territo said the two Clifton patrolmen remained on duty and said they acted properly: “At this point we’re not looking at it as if anything was done wrong. We’re really looking into it as a matter of course.”

“It wasn’t like a high-speed, lengthy chase,” he added. “It was almost over before it started.”

Fahy called the pursuit a “proper chase,” and said the police did not exceed the speed limit.

Anna Cardona, the victim’s mother, was leaving late Tuesday for Puerto Rico, said Cesar Adorno, with whom she has lived for several years. Adorno said he would follow today with Cardona’s body, which will be buried in Puerto Rico.

“If this hadn’t happened we would have stayed here,” Adorno said. “Maybe to make a life.”

The dead man was a “real good guy” who had “never been in trouble with the police anytime or anywhere,” said Cesar Adorno, who has lived with the victim’s mother, Anna Cardona, for several years.

Cardona’s family, including his younger brother, came to Newark in November to be with an ailing cousin, Adorno said. They moved in with relatives in Paterson in December.

Adorno said Manuel Cardona, who was born and raised in the Bronx until his family went to Puerto Rico when was 4 years old, was studying for his high school equivalency diploma and was working part-time in construction. Adorno said the family did not know the juveniles

involved in the crash, or how Cardona came to be behind the wheel of a stolen car.
They last saw Cardona early Monday evening before he went to “hang out” with friends.

Police arrived at the home about 2 a.m. Tuesday with the news of his death.

Caption: The wreckage of the 1986 Hyundai whose teenage driver was killed Monday in a crash while reportedly fleeing police. Police said the car was stolen in Paterson. 2 – Below, police investigating the scene of the accident Tuesday. 3 – (4s, 3s, 2s, 1s) PHOTO – Manuel Cardona and his family moved to New Jersey in November. 2 COLOR PHOTOS – PETER MONSEES / THE RECORD

ID: 17371116 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

MAN, 18, CRITICALLY HURT IN PRE-DAWN CAR ACCIDENT

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By MICHAEL O. ALLEN | Thursday, January 2, 1992

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | Page A08

An 18-year-old North Bergen man was hospitalized in critical condition Wednesday after he crashed his mother’s car into a telephone pole shortly before dawn on New Year’s Day, police and hospital officials said.

Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy said Paul Ghibesi will be charged with having an open container of beer in the car, possessing alcohol while being under age, and driving a car after his driver’s license had been revoked.

“He has not been charged with DWI,” Fahy said. “The investigation is continuing as whether that charge would be brought. ”
Fahy said it was also unclear whether Ghibesi had been speeding.

Two passengers in the car, James Lucarelli of Guttenberg and Robert Baker, visiting from North Carolina, suffered minor injuries. Baker, 18, was in good condition at Hackensack Medical Center. Lucarelli, also 18, was in satisfactory condition at Englewood Hospital. Ghibesi was being treated at Hackensack Medical Center.

The crash occurred about 4:50 a.m. on Broad Avenue, at the intersection of Prospect Avenue, when Ghibesi lost control of the car and crashed into the pole, Fahy said.

ID: 17364947 | Copyright © 1992, The Record (New Jersey)

YEARLONG HUNT VEXES HIT-RUN VICTIM’S BOSS

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer | Saturday, December 21, 1991

The Record (New Jersey) | Two Star B | NEWS | Page A04

Spencer Joseph worked so long at the IGA supermarket and was so popular around town that he was affectionately regarded as a borough landmark.

“He was one of the best persons around Maywood,” said Harry Tzimoulis, the owner of the supermarket. “He helped everyone. He was very friendly, and they all knew him by his first name. ”

But last year Joseph, 50, died after a hit-and-run accident. Authorities have not caught the driver.

Joseph was struck about 6:30 p.m. on Dec. 19, 1990, as he crossed West Spring Valley Road near Edel Avenue. He died nine hours later in Hackensack Medical Center.

Although the case remains open, the investigation is dormant because no witness to the accident has come forward, Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy said. Joseph was walking from his house to the Forum Diner on Route 4 when the accident occurred at the busy intersection.
A $1,250 reward donated anonymously by two residents and three borough businesses for information leading to an arrest did not help.

“We believe that the car that was involved was a late model Pontiac,” Fahy said. “We have a small fragment of a light that we think came off the car that hit him. ”

Joseph, who authorities said was mildly retarded and was taking medication for epilepsy, had worked in the IGA store for about 30 years.
Tzimoulis said he hopes the driver will develop a guilty conscience and come forward.

“It hurts me badly,” he said. “Spencer was somebody special.”

ID: 17364220 | Copyright © 1991, The Record (New Jersey)

4 INJURED AS CAR SLAMS INTO STALLED VAN

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By MICHAEL O. ALLEN | Sunday, November 17, 1991

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | Page A05

Four men were hurt, one critically, when an out-of-control car slammed into a stalled van as two men tried to help the van’s driver jump-start it.

Authorities are investigating why Reginald Nealy’s car, a 1991 Chrysler, careened into the other vehicles on Route 46 west, near Saddle Brook Mall, at about 5:50 p.m. Friday, Detective Sgt. Harry Reid said.

Nealy’s car crashed into the back of the disabled 1984 GMC van, pushing it 12 feet into the 1989 Hyundai being used to help restart it. The impact knocked down the van driver, Edward Nagle, 31, of 8 Central Ave., Stanhope, and ejected the Hyundai occupants: Kevin Kinsella, 37, of 340 S. Main St., Wharton, and Kent Erickson, 45, of 11 Sierra Court, Sayreville.

Nealy, 57, of 166 Van Buren St., Passaic, was in critical condition at Hackensack Medical Center with facial and internal injuries, a hospital spokeswoman said Saturday. Erickson was treated there and released, she said. Kinsella and Nagle were treated at Kennedy Memorial Hospitals and released, a spokeswoman said.

Reid, Saddle Brook Patrolman Robert McNally, the Bergen County fatal accident squad investigated the collision.

ID: 17361263 | Copyright © 1991, The Record (New Jersey)

TRUCK HITS MOTHER, 2 TOTS ON SIDEWALK

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By Michael O. Allen, Record Staff Writer

Sunday, September 15, 1991

The Record (New Jersey) | All Editions | NEWS | Page A07

A 36-year-old borough woman was in critical condition at Hackensack Medical Center on Saturday following an accident in which a motorist drove onto a sidewalk and struck her and her two young daughters, officials said.
Francine Culver suffered extensive head and chest injuries in the accident, which occurred about 6:25 p.m. Friday, Bergen County Prosecutor John J. Fahy said. Her 3-year-old daughter suffered a broken leg and was being treated at the hospital. Another daughter, a 4-year-old, escaped with scrapes and bruises, Fahy said.
Michael Gass, 24, driver of the Ford Ranger that hit the Culvers, was released Saturday after posting 10 percent of his $20,000 bail in cash. Gass, of 52 Susquehanna Ave., Rochelle Park, was charged with reckless driving, driving while intoxicated, refusal to take a Breathalyzer test, assault with auto, and two counts of aggravated assault, Fahy said.
Culver and her children were walking south on Caesar Place, about 100 feet from Moonachie Road, the borough’s main thoroughfare, when the truck hit them. The vehicle stopped about 200 feet away and Gass walked back to the spot where Culver and her children were lying on the sidewalk, Fahy said.
Fahy said the case would be referred to a grand jury.

Keywords: MOONACHIE; MOTOR VEHICLE; ACCIDENT; VICTIM; ALCOHOL; ABUSE

ID: 17355316 | Copyright © 1991, The Record (New Jersey)