bus accident
Mood:
don't ask
Topic: news
this is a story that has been in the news for a while. the info about a cell phone and radio is new info. just thought i'd share this with everyone....just another reason not to talk on the phone even if he wasn't.....they think he was if i am reading this right.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - July 20, 2006 - The mother of a girl who lost her hand in a bus crash that injured dozens of children on their way home from a field trip is suing the driver, the bus company, and other parties involved in the accident.
Makeba Fitzgerald alleged in a lawsuit filed Wednesday that
the driver, 18-year-old Kevin Talbert Jr., was distracted by his cell phone and a radio while driving children home to Philadelphia from the National Aquarium in Baltimore.
The suit also claims that Talbert should not have been driving, since federal law prohibits anyone under 21 from driving a commercial vehicle between states. His employer, Yellowbird Bus Co., of Philadelphia, is named as a defendant. "They booked the trip," Bernard Smalley, Fitzgerald's lawyer, said Thursday. "They knew he would be crossing state lines."
A preliminary police report on the July 5 accident near Aberdeen, Md., found that a truck cab driven by Michael Schultz went out of its lane on northbound Interstate 95 and hit the bus on its right side. The bus swerved into the median and back across both lanes of I-95, turning over on its left side and coming to rest on the shoulder.
Nearly 60 people were injured in the crash, including Fitzgerald's daughter, 8-year-old Deneik Brownlee.
Deneik was thrown from the bus and ended up with her right arm pinned under it. Her hand was severed, and she suffered multiple fractures to her right elbow and severe trauma to her shoulders and left arm and hand, according to the lawsuit.
She is now recuperating at a Philadelphia hospital.
The bus was one of six returning to Norris Square Day Camp in Philadelphia from Baltimore.
Smalley said it's not clear whether Talbert was using his phone at the time of the accident.
The lawsuit maintains that both Talbert and Schultz were driving unsafely.
Cowan Systems, a Baltimore trucking company that employed Schultz, was also named as a defendant.
An attorney for Schultz, of Northeast, Md., and Cowan Systems did not immediately return a phone call for comment.
The suit, filed in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court, alleges negligence, infliction of emotional distress and loss of consortium. It seeks compensatory and punitive damages.