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NEW YORK – April 29, 2012 – An out-of-control van careered across several lanes of traffic
on a New York City highway overpass Sunday, then plunged more than 50 feet off the side
of the road and landed in a ravine on the grounds of the Bronx Zoo, killing all seven people
aboard, authorities said. Three of the victims were children, fire department spokesman
Jim Long said, including girls ages 12 and 10 and a younger girl whose age wasn’t known.
The others were an 84-year-old man and three women, ages 80, 45 and 30. Long didn’t
name them. The van was headed south on the highway that cuts through a working-class
neighborhood when it bounced off the median, crossed all southbound lanes and hit the
guardrail, police said. Next to the guardrail is a pedestrian path, and the 4-foot-high iron
fence between that walkway and the ground below was intact after the accident, meaning
the van likely flipped over it. The van landed nearly upside down on zoo property that’s
closed to the public and far from any animal exhibits, zoo spokeswoman Mary Dixon said.
The vehicle lay mangled hours later, its right doors ripped off and strewn amid the trees
along with items from the car. Next to the heavily wooded area are subway tracks and a
train yard. It’s not clear what caused the van to go out of control. The southbound side of
the highway was closed briefly Sunday afternoon while police investigated. The accident
was the second in the past year where a car fell off the same stretch of the Bronx River Park-
way. Last June, the driver of a sport utility vehicle heading north lost control and the SUV
hit a divider, bounced through two lanes of traffic and fell 20 feet over a guardrail, landing
on a pickup truck in a parking lot. The two people in the SUV were injured. City agencies
will be asked to look at safety issues on the highway including guardrail height, Bronx bor-
ough President Ruben Diaz Jr. said in a statement Sunday. “My prayers, as well as those of
my office and all Bronxites, go out to the families of the seven victims,” he said. The wreck
was the deadliest in New York City since the driver of a tour bus returning from a Connecti-
cut casino in March of 2011 lost control and slammed into a pole that sheared the bus nearly
end to end, killing 14 passengers. In 2009, just north of New York City in suburban West-
chester County, a woman carrying a vanload of children drove nearly two miles in the wrong
direction on a highway before colliding with a sport utility vehicle. Eight people were killed,
including four children. An autopsy determined that the woman, Diane Schuler, had downed
at least 10 drinks and has smoked marijuana as recently as 15 minutes before the wreck.




