A huge tree split and fell over the front yard of a home on Carpenter Avenue in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in Sea Cliff, N.Y., on Tuesday.(Photo: Kathy Kmonicek, AP)
Bruce Latteri, 51, was sitting in a
chair in his house at 7:15 a.m. Tuesday when Hurricane Sandy's howling
wind hurled a tree through his Jefferson Township, N.J. house, killing
him instantly.
"It happened so quickly, he never knew what
happened," says Capt. Eric Wilsusen, spokesman for the Jefferson
Township police. "The house was completely destroyed."
HOW TO DONATE TO OPERATION SANDY RELIEF
The storm
that thrashed the East Coast from North Carolina to Connecticut has
killed dozens of people _ many, like Latteri, under the weight of
toppled trees. Other victims drowned as floodwaters deluged their homes
or swallowed their cars. At least two people died from electrocution.
Others died in car crashes on rain-slicked roads.
"Each storm has
its own degree of threats," said Chris Vaccaro, spokesman for the
National Weather Service. "Sandy really had it all. In many ways, Sandy
is in a league of her own because it had so many wide-ranging weather
threats over such a large and heavily populated area."
Hurricanes
kill most often with storm surge, Vaccaro said. In 2011's Hurricane
Irene, most people died in freshwater floods, he said.
In Sandy's assault, trees became its lethal weapon.
Trees
caused five of the six confirmed deaths attributed to Sandy in New
Jersey, said Lt. Stephen Jones, spokesman for New Jersey State Police.
In Connecticut, trees killed a volunteer firefighter and an elderly
woman. Two boys, 11 and 13, died in North Salem, N.Y., when a tree
crashed through the living room where they sat. A West Virginia
political candidate became the third person to die in that state when he
was struck by a tree limb.
Lt. Russell Neary, a volunteer
firefighter for the Easton, Conn., fire department was returning from a
fire call at 6:45 p.m. Monday when the squad came upon a tree blocking
the road, firefighter Alfred Doty said. As Neary helped move it, a tree
fell on him and killed him, Doty said.
At 7:50 p.m. Monday, as
Sandy kicked into full gear, Richard Everett, 54, and his wife,
Elizabeth, 48, were killed when a tree fell on their pickup, Mendham
Township, N.J., Police Chief Steve Crawford said. The couple and their
two children were driving in a development when the tree toppled onto
the front passenger seat. The two children, ages 11 and 14, escaped
through a rear window, he said.
Olga Raymond, 90, died Monday
evening in Mansfield, Conn., when she and two friends sought shelter at a
neighbor's home, Connecticut State Police Lt. J. Paul Vance said. As
the trio walked to the home, a large tree with a power line entwined in
its limbs fell on them, killing Raymond and seriously inuring the
others, Vance said. The power company and a tree service had to
extricate Raymond, he said.
Some of the gravest danger may come
after the rain and the wind has passed, says Ernest DelBuono, a retired
Coast Guard commander and a senior vice president at Levick, a crisis
communications firm in Washington.
People want to get out of their homes and survey the damage, DelBuono said.
"It's
still an extremely dangerous time," he said. "Power lines and trees
falling down are still hazards that can happen even after the hurricane
has passed."
Many people die after storms of carbon monoxide
poisoning from poorly ventilated generators and in car accidents,
particularly where traffic lights are out, Vaccaro of the Weather
Service said.
"These potentially lethal human hazards linger well after the storm has left," he said. "And many accidents are preventable."
Emergency
room visits surged 35% at Valley Hospital in Ridgewood, N.J, since the
storm and many of those injuries were avoidable, said Joseph Yallowitz,
medical director of the hospital's emergency department.
Patients
have fallen while fixing storm damage, strained their backs from lifting
tree branches and crashed their cars on debis-clogged roads, he said.
He said residents should wait until officials give the all-clear.
"There are a lot of loose limbs out there that are going to keep falling," Yallowitz said.
Jefferson
Township declared a state of emergency and asked people to avoid
leaving their homes after dark, yet "very few people heeded that
warning," Wilsusen said.
"We've got trees down, power lines down.
We don't want people walking around. There are definitely hazards out
there," he said. "We've seen people coiling up downed lines. Even some
of the power workers are saying you're crazy for doing something like
that."
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