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    Gruesome elevator accidents betray NY nightmare

    NEW YORK (AP) — Horrific elevator accidents that killed one woman going to work in an office building and badly injured another visiting a patient at a hospital for Christmas are making some people think twice before stepping over the gap and into the lifts that keep the city of towers and high-rises moving.

    "I've never really liked elevators," Alyson Schill said Thursday after hearing about the brutal death of an advertising executive who stepped into an elevator a day earlier in a midtown Manhattan office building and was dragged and crushed.

    The Queens resident shuddered a little as she compared the accident to a horror movie.

    "But I work on the ninth floor, and I can't by any means take the stairs up to work every day. ... So it's a conundrum," Schill said. "There are risks you run with every choice you make."

    On Thursday, prosecutors announced charges in a similar case that had Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes sharing his own fear of the moving windowless boxes on which the residents of the nation's largest city rely.

    "I guess everybody gets into an elevator. ... Me, I'm claustrophobic. I'm always concerned of being trapped between floors, but I never would think of something like this happening," Hynes said as he recounted the ordeal faced by a woman who became trapped by a faulty elevator on Christmas Day last year.

    The woman, Deborah Jordan, was dragged up eight floors, crushing her arm and leg against the wall of the elevator shaft, after a repairman wrongly disabled a safety switch that would have prevented the elevator from moving while its doors were open, prosecutors said.

    The repairman, Jason Jordan, who's no relation to the injured woman, was charged Thursday with assault and reckless endangerment and was released without bail. He said outside court it was a terrible accident.

    "That accident happened after I left (the hospital)," he said.

    The two accidents — nearly a year apart — hardly represent a clear and present danger for the city's residents. Last year, there were 53 elevator accidents reported out of more than 60,000 working elevators throughout the metropolis, the Department of Buildings said.

    But despite the odds, the bloody tales still seemed to have the power of an urban legend — or urban nightmare.

    Bartender Neill O'Reilly, who works in Times Square, said that his patrons had been buzzing about the woman killed by a technology she no doubt took for granted.

    He said elevators are "too unreliable," explaining that he would never agree to live in an elevator building. Still, he said, the stairs in his second-story walk-up present their own hazards: "It's always a danger when you're drunk."

    While many New Yorkers may harbor a fear of getting trapped between floors, April Gabriel says her fears are more dire.

    "You know when it stops on every floor and has that thump sound? It kind of jerks a little?" she said. "I hold on real tight."

    And each time, she said, she imagines the worst: "The same thing that happened to that poor woman — or it just going down and down and not stopping."

    She said hearing the story of this week's fatal accident just makes her more determined to avoid elevators whenever possible.

    "I'd rather take the steps anyway," she said. "It burns calories."

    Hynes' announcement came a day after Manhattan advertising executive Suzanne Hart was killed, but the two accidents were unrelated.

    On Wednesday, Hart was stepping onto an elevator at her Madison Avenue office building when it rose abruptly with its doors still open, pulling her along. She was crushed to death between floors.

    Department of Buildings spokesman Tony Sclafani said Thursday that workers from New York-based elevator company Transel had been performing electrical maintenance work on the elevator involved in the accident hours before it malfunctioned. He said investigators would be examining other elevators maintained by the company around the city.

    "This work has now become the focus of our investigation. We're going to be reviewing their maintenance protocols," Sclafani said.

    He said that the force of the accident raised potential structural concerns for the building and that engineers were conducting a review.

    The elevator company did not promptly return a telephone call seeking comment Thursday.

    Hynes said that last Christmas Deborah Jordan was at SUNY Downstate Medical Center with her daughter to visit a patient when she stepped onto an elevator that suddenly lurched up. Her leg became trapped outside, in the space between the elevator car and the elevator shaft, and scraped against the floors as it rose.

    Her daughter is seen on surveillance video reacting in horror as she is dragged up. As she moves up the hospital, doctors gasp and turn and run to try to get help.

    One woman covers her ears because of Jordan's screams.

    Jordan went up eight floors, to where the repairman was working and had called up the faulty elevator by wrongly tripping a switch, prosecutors said. Safety mechanisms are supposed to prevent elevators from moving while their doors are open.

    Hynes said investigators determined the repairman, who arrived shortly before Jordan was injured, was to blame.

    The repairman should have gone floor to floor to make sure no one was inside the faulty elevator before he tripped the switch on it and should have had someone working with him, prosecutors said.

    The injured woman spent three months in a hospital being treated and is still in a rehabilitation center, prosecutors said.

    Hynes urged the passage of a bill, led by state Assemblyman Keith Wright, that would amend labor laws to require continuing education and licensing for people who operate elevators to help avoid accidents like the ones that killed Hart and injured Jordan.

    "It's not a particularly common event," Hynes said, "but that it happens at all, and the juxtaposition between the death of that poor woman just recently and what happened to Miss Jordan, has got to make everyone very, very concerned."

    ___

    Samantha Gross can be reached at www.twitter.com/samanthagross

     
    • robert u  •  Providence, United States  •  5 mths ago
      maybe we should start employing elevator operators again. This didnt happen when you had a person operating the doors and lift controls
      • F U 5 mths ago
        lol
      • Craig 5 mths ago
        I actually rode on a elevator with an operator once, I am not that old but it was the last of its kinds when I rode on it.
    • J  •  Richardson, United States  •  5 mths ago
      I was in an elevator at my office garage when it malfunctioned and fell 5 floors. I was permanently injured and no one was ever found liable. The computer system thought the elevator was on a different floor and "oversped" to the "correct" floor to reset itself. Yes it can happen, yes you CAN get hurt, and no, you do not have time to think to try and jump up in the air to keep from hitting the floor. And lawsuits go nowhere.
      • caligurl 5 mths ago
        im so sorry i would have been freaked out..but its good your alive to tell your story =)
      • Anna 5 mths ago
        Wow, I'm so sorry. For whatever reason I have nightmares about elevators falling. I used to think about the jumping thing but if you think about it, the only way you can jump is if you have something solid to push off of. You could never jump in a falling elevator for that reason. Anyway, it's really wrong that you haven't been able to get any compensation, and I hope you keep trying.
    • Dick Beaverhouse  •  Dallas, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Good News! The elevator has been fixed.

      Okay, you go first.
    • JK  •  Des Moines, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Headline makes no sense
    • Clayton E  •  Dallas, United States  •  5 mths ago
      I like how she says because she works on the ninth floor, "I can't by any means take the stairs up to work every day." So do your legs work? Are you disabled? If not then 9 flights of stairs is totally doable. I used to use the stairs for an eleventh floor office all the time.
    • just me  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  5 mths ago
      About 15- years ago someone was getting on an elevator and they had on a Walkman and the doors slammed shut their neck and the elevatortook off decapitating the individual and the headphones were still on the head..true story!!! I still have the article I cut out of The Indianapolis Star...the accident did not happen here, I think it happened on the east coast.
      • Sarah 5 mths ago
        I believe it, I've heard of at least 2 other people who were decapitated by elevators!
      • caligurl 5 mths ago
        in california theres this train called BART and the doors will always close no matter what, so pray your scarf doesnt get stuck...i did an intership there and they told me.
    • Bee  •  Mobile, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Statistics don't mean sqat if you or your family are the ones injured or killed.
    • 007  •  Jacksonville, United States  •  5 mths ago
      I never like elevators I feel trapped in it & can't breathe. I remember when we took the elevator up to the top of Twin Towers in NY. It was moving so fast & it made me feel like
      puking.
      • 38 Special 5 mths ago
        I used to ride that elevator drunk and full of tacos, then i would purposedly throw up inside it. all over the doors and the floor. You should have seen the look on people's faces. lol Fun times.
      • 007 5 mths ago
        Did everyone get off to the next floor after you puke? Just curious.
    • Fixer  •  5 mths ago
      Elevators have been in common use for a hundred years. It was a freak accident and nothing for the general public to fear. This is the first time in my life I've ever heard of such an accident. I use elevators every single day and am not the slightest bit worried.
    • Leigh  •  Pittsburgh, United States  •  5 mths ago
      These accidents are NOT ISOLATED INCIDENTS! April 5, 2008 Gary Gaines was dragged up 17 floors in an elevator shaft in the Bronx. He was visiting his elderly mother and had gone downstairs to pick up her mail, when he went to re-enter the elevator the exterior doors closed...the interior (car) doors did not. The car lurched and he was caught between the elevator car and dragged up the shaft 17 floors. There were 2 other people in the elevator who have to live with that horrific memory. Gary died May 5, 2008 as the result of his injuries, after suffering for 30 days. Those of us that were lucky enough to have known him are still suffering. It makes me physically ill to know that this has taken the life of yet another person, and if the City of New York responds as they did with Gary's family, then the family of this latest tragedy can expect to be ignored and swept under the rug! Gary's family lost their only son, I lost my best friend. This NEVER should have happened again, PLEASE DO NOT LET THIS ISSUE DIE!
      Gary, I will carry your memory forever in my heart, but I would give anything to give you one more hug and tell you how much I love you.
    • NON_XST  •  Greensboro, United States  •  5 mths ago
      final destination:elevator
    • KickingAss  •  5 mths ago
      I think I may have found your problem:

      "Hynes said investigators determined the repairman, who arrived shortly before Jordan was injured, was to blame.

      The repairman should have gone floor to floor to make sure no one was inside the faulty elevator before he tripped the switch on it and should have had someone working with him, prosecutors said."

      I'm not an expert, but why would the repair man have to go from floor to floor to check if there were some one in the elevator? The car can only be at one floor at any given time.

      It seems there are unanswered questions. If the safety system was turned off, then the car should have been shut down first, it just makes sense.

      If he didn't know that the safety system was disabled, he did what anyone would do, push the "call" button. If the safety system was enabled and the doors were open, the car would not have moved.

      So the question then is: Did he know the status of the safety system; and did he act accordingly. If the safety system was disabled, as we know it was, would any "call" button being pressed have had the same result?

      Was the car switched off? With the safety system disabled the car should also be disabled to keep it from moving. It can be switched off by a keyed switch in the car and also by a system switch. Did the repair man change any of these switches?

      I got the impression that there was someone else working on the machine before the guy who is taking the rap. The guy that pushed to button nine stories away from the car, and apparently thought it was safe to bring it up.
    • Austinski  •  San Francisco, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Everyone's fear is overblown and irrational. It's like saying you're scared to fly after a plane crash, even though flying is many, many, many times more safe than driving.
    • Hope  •  Sherman, United States  •  5 mths ago
      I sure hate elevators. When I was a child, I always had horrible elevator dreams. And now as a neurotic adult...I cannot step in one without someone with me. And still I am in panic mode the whole time. And what is really stupid, is that I live somewhere where the highest the floors go is level 5. I should probably be telling a doctor this and not yahoo news bahahahhaa.
    • Dale  •  Panama City, United States  •  5 mths ago
      This accident is the result of some uneducated mechanic who obviously not only jumped out the hoistway doorlocks but the gate switch as well.I say off with his head before he kills someone else.
    • H  •  5 mths ago
      you'd think by now humans would have perfected the elevator. we can probe other planets, we can visit the moon, we can break the sound barrier, we can split an atom, we can shoot, edit, and upload entire movies with our handheld wireless telephones...but elevators have us totally stumped.
    • InFlames58  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Im an elevator mechanic in Los Angeles and this same thing happened in Long
      Beach 2 weeks ago which also led to death. The biggest problems are that the elevator companies are slow and in order to make up for the loss of profits they don't give the elevator service mechanics enough time to maintain and ensure that the proper safety procedures are in place while while working. They have doubled the workload and now theres thousands of elevators not getting the proper attention that is needed in order for them to run up to par. It's a huge problem that needs to be addressed asap!!
    • mikex  •  5 mths ago
      cost cutters anonymous, hide checkoff certificate in office, send one not two maintenance people, rush rush rush get the job done and get to the next one, if you can't do it we have people waiting for your job. the elevator operator was a great job for a person of small skills and not much education. all that was needed was social skills but there was a cost factor, and the bean counters said cut people. that is always the answer cut the work force. no elevator operators, no helpers for the maintenance men [they could be learning the job, as apprentice maintenance, then be someone with skill when senior maintenance retires]. how many people out there remember or know of someone who was an apprentice.
    • bill  •  Washington, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Accidents happen. 60,000 elevators moving constantly most every day makes it impossible to have no accidents. These two were tragic.
    • just me  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Oh I hope they drug test these mechanics but I know for a fact that gets circumvented unfortunately!
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