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Girl killed by runaway bus in CH — Brooklynian

Girl killed by runaway bus in CH

Ugh. SO sad... on NY1 this morning they're saying it was a little boy who got on the bus and released the emergency brake as a prank.
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The New York Times
May 23, 2006
Girl, 8, Killed in Brooklyn by a Runaway School Bus
By JENNIFER 8. LEE and ANN FARMER

An 8-year-old Brooklyn girl was killed yesterday afternoon after she was pinned on the sidewalk underneath a runaway school bus in Crown Heights, the police said.

The bus had been left empty and legally parked by the driver while he went to lunch, the police said. An 8-year-old neighborhood boy, who witnesses said had entered the empty bus with a companion before it started moving, was taken in for questioning, the police said.

The victim, Amber Sadiq, was crossing Nostrand Avenue near Crown Street with her 10-year-old brother at 3:16 p.m., the police said.

The school bus had been parked north of that intersection but started moving down a slight incline.

The bus gathered speed as it moved across the intersection, and it hit Amber about 100 feet from where it had been parked, the police said. The brother was not injured.

"She tried to run but the garbage can was in the way," said Kassandra Polanco, 12, a witness. The bus swerved onto the sidewalk, pinning Amber underneath.

A group of 20 to 25 neighbors tried to lift the bus off her, witnesses said.

"Someone in the crowd was yelling, 'One, two, three,' and it wouldn't move, it was heavy," said Sulanch Lewis, a witness. A nearby Con Edison truck with a crane on it was used to lift the bus.

"But she looked dead and we were just crying," Ms. Lewis said.

Amber was taken to Kings County Hospital Center, where she was pronounced dead at 3:40 p.m., the police said.

The driver, Jean Lima, had parked the bus and taken a brown-bag lunch down the block to JRN Realty to eat with a friend, Richard Joseph. The police said they were not sure whether the front door of the bus had been locked; the back door, an emergency exit, cannot be locked. The operator of the bus is Jofaz Transportation of Red Hook.

Witnesses said they had seen two neighborhood boys enter the bus. One of them, Safari James, 8, was taken in by the police for questioning, said Rosslyn James, 79, his grandmother.

Amber was in the second grade at Public School 161, her family said. She lived on Crown Street with her extended family, including her brother, Umar, and an older sister.

"She was just a happy kid all the time," said Lucy Caba, 29, her aunt. At the family apartment last evening, Umar was crying and trembling.

"I saw it happen and someone carried me home," he said, with tears on his face.

Neighbors described Amber and Umar as close. They would cross Nostrand Avenue twice a day, walking together the two blocks to and from school. They would sometimes play jump rope and basketball together outside.

Amber was a tidy, well-behaved girl, neighbors said. She would do her homework after school and be in bed by the time her mother, Reina, arrived home from work.

Her hair was always combed, said Christen Delacruz, 14, who lives in the building. Her clothes were always ironed and she was always on time for school, he said.

By evening, a makeshift memorial had been set up at the intersection where the accident occurred, which had votive candles, furry teddy bears and a shiny pink pillow that said, "I love you."

One neighbor, Sheena Rose, left a card with a poem that read: "You could make anyone laugh if they were having a bad day. No matter how sad I was, you could take the hurt away."

Al Baker contributed reporting for this article.

Comments

  • I was listening to the radio this morning and the hosts were saying that the DA is going to try and charge this kid with negligent homicide as an adult.

    This is a tragedy, but I don't know how you can convince anyone that an eight year-old has the capacity to form the intent which is an element of the crime. Seems like Hynes is grandstanding here. Not to mention how do you house an eight year old in an adult facility? Keep him in solitary? This is just madness.

    It was a horrible tragedy, but I just don't see how you can get to this kid knowing that what he was doing could possibly result in someone's death. Especially if you've ever spent any time with kids. At eight, they barely can conceptualize the fact they are endangering themselves, let alone someone else.
  • Anonymous wrote: I was listening to the radio this morning and the hosts were saying that the DA is going to try and charge this kid with negligent homicide as an adult.
    Wow. Yeah, going just a bit too far there...
  • I was listening to the radio this morning and the hosts were saying that the DA is going to try and charge this kid with negligent homicide as an adult.

    This is a tragedy, but I don't know how you can convince anyone that an eight year-old has the capacity to form the intent which is an element of the crime. Seems like Hynes is grandstanding here. Not to mention how do you house an eight year old in an adult facility? Keep him in solitary? This is just madness.

    It was a horrible tragedy, but I just don't see how you can get to this kid knowing that what he was doing could possibly result in someone's death. Especially if you've ever spent any time with kids. At eight, they barely can conceptualize the fact they are endangering themselves, let alone someone else.
  • kids dont understand those things. so best do what they do in asian countries kane their asses.
  • Surprised that everyone is blaming the 8-year old, it was a horrible accident. But my question is what happened to the individuals who were supposed to be watching the kid… I don’t get how a kid can be on a bus by himself, or have any access to “change gears”? I mean I am not around children… and I am not sure how the whole school bus thing works… but… shouldn’t someone have been aware of a kid going near the driver’s seat??
  • jaha127 wrote: Surprised that everyone is blaming the 8-year old, it was a horrible accident. But my question is what happened to the individuals who were supposed to be watching the kid… I don’t get how a kid can be on a bus by himself, or have any access to “change gears”? I mean I am not around children… and I am not sure how the whole school bus thing works… but… shouldn’t someone have been aware of a kid going near the driver’s seat??
    yeah, I'm having issues with the kid being dragged into court on this. I take way more issue with the fact that the bus isn't secured against entry, and that the parking brake is so easy to release that an 8 year old can do it. yeesh.
  • I was watching Channel 7 this morning and this is not the first time the two boys snick on the bus.

    The two kids snuck on the bus through the emergency exit while the bus driver was on break. They actually got caught last friday doing the same thing but were pulled off the bus by a teacher (or a monitor of some sort). The same lady who got them this time didn't know that the breaks had already been released and she is blaming herself. This is such a horrific story.
  • But my question is what happened to the individuals who were supposed to be watching the kid…
    I think that this was one of those situations where the kids were just out in the street "playing" by themselves. It was quarter after three so they were probably on their way home from school or had just gotten home. Its unfortunate, but I see a lot of kids his age around in the neighborhood amusing themselves.
  • jaha127 wrote: Surprised that everyone is blaming the 8-year old, it was a horrible accident. But my question is what happened to the individuals who were supposed to be watching the kid… I don’t get how a kid can be on a bus by himself, or have any access to “change gears”? I mean I am not around children… and I am not sure how the whole school bus thing works… but… shouldn’t someone have been aware of a kid going near the driver’s seat??
    they cant lock those doors in the back against dot codes etc... just like in buildings those emergency doors have to be left unlock! you can open those doors from the back.
  • armchair_warrior wrote: [quote=jaha127]Surprised that everyone is blaming the 8-year old, it was a horrible accident. But my question is what happened to the individuals who were supposed to be watching the kid… I don’t get how a kid can be on a bus by himself, or have any access to “change gears”? I mean I am not around children… and I am not sure how the whole school bus thing works… but… shouldn’t someone have been aware of a kid going near the driver’s seat??
    they cant lock those doors in the back against dot codes etc... just like in buildings those emergency doors have to be left unlock! you can open those doors from the back.

    Yes but they snuck in the back - they are only supposed to open from the inside to the outside and some sort of alarm should have sounded no matter which way the door was opened.

    My sympathies go out to the little girl's family as well as the family of the boys.
  • stacey wrote: [quote=armchair_warrior][quote=jaha127]Surprised that everyone is blaming the 8-year old, it was a horrible accident. But my question is what happened to the individuals who were supposed to be watching the kid… I don’t get how a kid can be on a bus by himself, or have any access to “change gears”? I mean I am not around children… and I am not sure how the whole school bus thing works… but… shouldn’t someone have been aware of a kid going near the driver’s seat??
    they cant lock those doors in the back against dot codes etc... just like in buildings those emergency doors have to be left unlock! you can open those doors from the back.

    Yes but they snuck in the back - they are only supposed to open from the inside to the outside and some sort of alarm should have sounded no matter which way the door was opened.

    My sympathies go out to the little girl's family as well as the family of the boys.the alarm doesnt really work. i drove a bus before. it just rings and stops when you close the door again. its a low level ring only heard inside the bus to show that the door is open. like in cars when you leave the door ajar.

    :( its very sad. i feel bad for the girl's family :(.
  • armchair_warrior wrote: [quote=jaha127]Surprised that everyone is blaming the 8-year old, it was a horrible accident. But my question is what happened to the individuals who were supposed to be watching the kid… I don’t get how a kid can be on a bus by himself, or have any access to “change gears”? I mean I am not around children… and I am not sure how the whole school bus thing works… but… shouldn’t someone have been aware of a kid going near the driver’s seat??
    they cant lock those doors in the back against dot codes etc... just like in buildings those emergency doors have to be left unlock! you can open those doors from the back.

    Ironically today as I came home, a news reporter (I couldn't see the station logo on the camera from where I was) was taping in front of Middle College High School (Nostrand and Crown-- just up the street from where the accident occured). He was doing a piece on the emergency door. I stood there listening for about a minute or so and of course they didn't really mention the DOT codes or anything....
  • blksafyre wrote: [quote=armchair_warrior][quote=jaha127]Surprised that everyone is blaming the 8-year old, it was a horrible accident. But my question is what happened to the individuals who were supposed to be watching the kid… I don’t get how a kid can be on a bus by himself, or have any access to “change gears”? I mean I am not around children… and I am not sure how the whole school bus thing works… but… shouldn’t someone have been aware of a kid going near the driver’s seat??
    they cant lock those doors in the back against dot codes etc... just like in buildings those emergency doors have to be left unlock! you can open those doors from the back.

    Ironically today as I came home, a news reporter (I couldn't see the station logo on the camera from where I was) was taping in front of Middle College High School (Nostrand and Crown-- just up the street from where the accident occured). He was doing a piece on the emergency door. I stood there listening for about a minute or so and of course they didn't really mention the DOT codes or anything....

    if there was a accident and they would be able to open the doors from the outside through those exits that never locks.
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