Tragic video shows gender reveal party end in disaster as plane crashes in front of guests, pilot dies



A gender reveal party ended in disaster as a plane attempting a stunt crashed and killed the pilot.

A couple held a gender reveal party on Saturday in Sinaloa, Mexico. The expecting mother and father hired a pilot to fly a small plane over a gender reveal party in Laguna de San Pedro, Sinaloa. The plane would release pink-dyed water over the party to signify the upcoming birth of their baby girl. However, the stunt ended in a gender reveal disaster.

The soon-to-be-parents are standing in front of an "Oh baby" sign with pink and blue balloons. The small plane flew straight above the couple and dropped pink water. Meanwhile, a cannon on the ground erupted and fired out pink confetti.

As the pilot pulled up, the plane's wings collapsed mid-flight and the aircraft spiraled out of control. Meanwhile, the couple hug and kiss to celebrate the gender reveal as the partygoers cheer about the unborn daughter.

The plane crashed to the ground. Emergency response teams reportedly arrived at the crash site and found the pilot lying unresponsive in the plane wreckage. The pilot was taken to the Mexican Social Security Institute in Navolato, but was pronounced dead at the hospital.

The Aviation Safety Network said of the gender reveal accident: "Piper PA-25-235 Pawnee crashed after the left-hand wing failed after an emergency hopper release of (pink dyed) water during a gender reveal party."

The Mexican news outlet Línea Directa Portal reported that 32-year-old Luis Ángel, from Navaloto, was the pilot who died in the gender reveal disaster.

No other injuries were reported.

(WARNING: Graphic video)

Gender reveal party ends in tragedy as plane crashes in front of oblivious guests | New York Post www.youtube.com

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Multiple hazmat train derailments in the US over the past several months prompt questions about corner-cutting and malfeasance



A train containing hazardous materials went off the rails Thursday in Van Buren Township outside Detroit, Michigan, just two weeks after the ruinous derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

These incidents, coupled with several similar derailments in recent months, have prompted greater scrutiny over an apparent trend of questionable train wrecks in the United States.

While Department of Transportation and Federal Railroad Administration officials have not commented on the possibility that any of the derailments have been coordinated, there are however a host of other reasons — such as the corporate prioritization of efficiency over safety — that may account for why derailments like Norfolk Southern's in East Palestine, though not wholly uncommon, were preventable and could prove more catastrophic down the line.

What are the details?

Below is a list of some of the recent derailments this year:

  • Feb. 16 Van Buren Township, Michigan: A train operated by Norfolk Southern had around six cars go off the tracks, at least one of which was carrying hazardous materials.
  • Feb. 13Splendora, Texas: A Union Pacific train had 21 cars go off the tracks after a collision with a tractor-trailer. Newsweek indicated that the tractor-trailer leaked diesel and oil.
  • Feb. 13Enoree, South Carolina: A CSX train had three cars come off the tracks. The scene was reportedly cleared in short order.
  • Feb. 3 East Palestine, Ohio: A train operated by Norfolk Southern carrying around 150 loaded cars, nine empty cars, and three locomotives had around 50 cars go off the tracks, several with toxic contents, including vinyl chloride, hydrogen chloride, ethylene glycol, monobutyl ether, ethylhexyl acrylate, isobutylene, and phosgene.
  • Feb. 1Detroit, Michigan: A CN Rail train had eight empty railcars derail and one teeter over the side of a rail bridge.
  • Jan. 21Outside Loris, South Carolina: Six gravel-laden cars on an RJ Corman Railroad line went off the tracks a mile south of Allsbrook.
  • Jan. 19Trinway, Ohio: An Ohio Central Railroad train composed of 97 cars went off the rails. No leaks occurred, reported the Times Recorder.
  • Jan. 9Lake City, South Carolina: A CSX freight train struck an empty car that had been left on the tracks; 25 cars went off the tracks.

According to the U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Railroad Administration, there were 471 derailments in the U.S. in 2022. The five states with the most derailments were Texas (44), Georgia (37), Ohio (33), Tennessee (29), and Illinois (29).

These derailments resulted in $92,958,685 in reportable damages and four injuries. The previous year saw over $105 million in reportable damages.

Incidents involving hazardous materials can also be costly, although the true devastation is not fully accounted for in dollars and cents, as East Palestine has learned.

Grid reported that railway accidents involving hazardous materials inflicted around $17 million in damage in 2022 alone. Rail hazmat accidents reportedly dealt roughly $15 million in damage in 2021.

Federal data indicates that Norfolk Southern, which just celebrated "double-digit percentage growth in revenue and ... record revenue and operating income," accounted for over half the hazmat damages involving rail transportation in 2022.

For instance, a train operated by Norfolk Southern suffered a derailment on Sept. 19, 2022, in Albers, Illinois, spilling over 20,000 gallons of methyl methacrylate monomer, a combustible liquid. According to an incident report, the result was $3.2 million in damage.

Again, on Oct. 8, 2022, in Sandusky, Ohio, a train operated by Norfolk Southern spilled approximately 20,000 gallons of paraffin wax, reportedly causing $2.6 million in damage.

Devastating 'efficiencies'

The U.S. Government Accountability Office issued a report in 2019 that accounted for some of the recent derailments: "Freight train length has increased in recent years, according to all seven Class I freight railroads. ... Officials identified increased efficiencies and economic benefits among the advantages of longer freight trains."

The report also states that officials from the FRA, railroad employees unions, and others have indicated that "longer mixed-freight trains may be more difficult to handle than unit trains in certain circumstances due to variations in car length and weight and the extent to which additional DP locomotives are employed."

Bob Comer, a railroad expert who has investigated a slew of accidents, told Grid, "We’re talking about a U.S. industry starting in 1825 that has put money first and safety last. ... They’ve gone to these longer trains, and they’ve cut back on their maintenance crews."

Comer suggested that longer trains means more cargo and potential damage on a greater and possibly catastrophic scale.

Jared Cassity, a legislative director for SMART Transportation Division, told Politico, "The longer the train, the heavier the train, the more wear and tear it puts on the actual rail itself, as well as the equipment."

According to Cassity, this wear and tear leads to "more unintended train separations, which is where the train breaks apart."

These longer trains are not necessarily staffed by more rail workers.

Republican Sens. J.D. Vance (Ohio) and Marco Rubio (Fla.) penned a letter Wednesday to DOT Secretary Pete Buttigieg, drawing attention to the fact that the Norfolk Southern train that darkened the sky over East Palestine and sullied the waters "had a three-member crew overseeing the entirety of its 150 cars: a locomotive engineer, a conductor, and a conductor trainee."

"Current and former rail workers, industry observers, and reform advocates have pointed to precision-scheduled railroading (PSR), by which rail companies such as Norfolk Southern increase efficiency and drive down costs by moving more freight with fewer workers, as a potential contributor to the accident. We have voiced concerns with PSR, as well as with this administration’s prioritizing of efficiency over resilience in its national infrastructure and transportation systems," added the senators.

The DOT Office of Inspector General issued a report in February 2016 accounting for another potential reason why rail hazmat incidents appear to be continuing unabated.

The report found that the FRA had not "conducted a comprehensive evaluation of risks associated with hazardous materials transportation that appropriately addresses national level risk. Neither the National Inspection Plan nor the hazardous materials staffing process — two nationwide tools provided to regional specialists — produces a complete evaluation of risk. For example, both models assess how much hazardous material is routed through a region, but not the proximity of those routes to population centers."

Inspectors are allegedly provided with decent training and guidance, however the report claimed that complicated information systems and outdated web portals hamper efforts to enforce hazardous materials regulations.

Additionally, the report claimed that "FRA pursues limited civil penalties for violations of hazardous materials regulations and, despite departmental requirements in several DOT Orders, does not refer cases to our office for criminal investigation."

A failure to hold offenders accountable except for "serious incidents of non-compliance" apparently served to neuter penalties as disincentives for violations.

Bank of America analyst Ken Hoexter indicated this week that in the case of the Feb. 3 Norfolk Southern disaster in Ohio, the railway may have to pay $40 million to $50 million in a "casualty charge," reported FreightWaves. However, on the top end, this would equal roughly 1.7% of its 2022 profits and amount to a drop in the bucket.

Jason Seidl, an analyst at the financial services firm Cowen, suggested Tuesday, "While the severity of the derailment earlier this month is still unclear, if history is a guide, the unfortunate event may not have much long-term impact on the rail carrier’s share."

The Railroad Workers Union appears to believe that the reasons mentioned above, together, may account for the kind of accidents that took place in East Palestine, reported the New Republic.

While the RWU contended that "the immediate cause of the wreck appears to have been a nineteenth-century style mechanical failure of the axle on one of the cars," the long-trend cause may have been the "short-term profit imperative, the so-called 'cult of the Operating Ratio' — of NS and the other Class 1 railroads — has made cutting costs, employees, procedures, and resources the top priority."

"The wreck of Train 32N has been years in the making. What other such train wrecks await us remains to be seen," the RWU said. "But given the modus operandi of the Class One rail carriers, we can no doubt expect future disasters of this nature."

Despite the calamity in Ohio, Ian Jefferies, head of the Association of American Railroads trade group, has suggested that 99.9% of hazardous materials cargo makes its way to its destinations safely, reported the Independent.

As dead fish floated down Ohio streams en masse and East Palestine residents contemplated possible tumor-laden futures, Jefferies noted, "Railroads are the safest form of moving goods across land in the country without question."

TheBlaze reached out to officials at the Department of Transportation and the Federal Railroad Administration, inquiring whether they are concerned with the frequency of derailments; what new actions if any they are taking to preclude future derailments rom taking place; and whether they suspect any of the recent derailments to have been coordinated. They did not respond by deadline.

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When Bureaucrats Butt In On Strike Negotiations, Railroads Get Costly Mandates And Zero Fixes

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Men seen in CCTV footage violently shaking Indian suspension bridge moments before its horrific collapse — at least 133 dead



At least 133 people are dead after a suspension bridge snapped and collapsed in western India. The bridge, touted by state officials as "an engineering marvel," had been reopened to the public just days after renovations were allegedly completed by the Oreva Group, an e-bike manufacturer and appliance maker.

Although the preconditions for the horrific tragedy that took place on Sunday are now under investigation, with several arrests already made, it appears the catalyst was caught on camera.

Reconstruction

The Julto Pul ("hanging bridge") was a popular tourist site in the city of Morbi in Gujarat state, India, originally built by the British in the late 1880s.

The bridge spanned 233 meters over the Machchhu River and measured 1.25 meters wide. The walkway was built of aluminum and hemmed in by steel wires and netting.

DeshGujarat reported that work had been undertaken this summer to restore the 140-year-old structure and enhance its "longevity and pleasure quotient." The cost of these restorative efforts was approximately $243,040 USD.

Chief Officer of Morbi Municipality Sandeepsinh Zala stated that the bridge reopened after renovation on the Gujarati New Year day celebrated on October 26, despite allegedly not having yet received any "fitness certificate" from the local government.

In addition to a lack of certification, there were reportedly no proper quality checks executed before the bridge's reopening to the public.

Destruction

Around 6:30 p.m. on Sunday, between 400 and 500 people were on the bridge. Officials claimed that the structure snapped owing to the weight of the all the people.

CCTV footage of the incident revealed that right up until the moment of collapse, multiple men were trying to shake the bridge from side to side, seen here:

\u201cCCTV footage of moment before #Morbi bridge collapse. Deeply painful! \ud83d\udc47\u201d
— YSR (@YSR) 1667196420

The bridge plunged into the river, sending some bodies flying. Survivors clung to cables, wreckage, and netting for dear life. Others dropped into shallow waters.

One segment of the bridge twisted and curled downward. Another segment just dropped straight into the depths below.

The BBC indicated that most of the victims were women, children, or elderly.

Ashwin Mehra, among the survivors, told News18 that some "mischievous men were shaking the ropes of the bridge. Three times a noise came from it before it happened."

Mehra, lying in a hospital bed in Morbi, said, "I held onto branches of nearby trees and eventually escaped."

Viyay Goswami corroborated Mehra's claim, suggesting that youths who were "indifferent" had been shaking the bridge, making it difficult for people to walk.

"There were just too many people on the bridge," said Sidik Bai. "We could barely move."

The AP reported that while Sidik survived by holding onto the bridge's cable, his friend was crushed by the twisted walkway.

Sidik said, "One by one they all began disappearing in the water."

A young man, still looking for his 6-year-old sister, told the BBC, "I was holding her hand when the bridge collapsed and we fell into the river. I survived and have been looking for her everywhere ... my sister is nowhere to be found."

Another video shows the aftermath, with survivors and first responders rushing to pull the dead and the injured out of the river:

\u201cCable bridge collapsed in Morbi, Gujarat, about 400 people fell in the river, many feared drowned\n\nBridge was renovated and opened just 5 days back.\n\n#Gujarat #Morbi\u201d
— Truth Unfolds (@Truth Unfolds) 1667141485

Aftermath

Rescuers, joined by over 300 members of the Indian Army, Navy, Coast Guard and Air Force, worked late into the night, searching for survivors and bodies.

The AP reported that as of early Monday morning, 177 people had already been rescued from the river.

The leader of India's opposition party, Mallikarjun Kharge, demanded an investigation into how the bridge collapsed only five to six days after being reopened.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is from the region, is expected to visit Morbi on Tuesday.

Modi expressed his condolences to the families who lost loved ones, saying, "In this hour of grief, the government is with the bereaved families in every manner."

The prime minister announced that the Gujarat government "has constituted a committee to investigate this incident. I assure the people of the country that there will be no laxity in rescue and relief operations."

Officials indicated that at least nine people have been arrested so far in connection with the tragic collapse: two Oreva Group managers, two contractors, two ticket clerks, and three security guards, all booked for negligence.

According to India Today, the Oreva Group, responsible for maintaining the bridge, is now seeking to pin blame on a third party, Devprakash Solutions, which it alleged had been subcontracted to complete the restoration.

The regional government that runs the western Indian state of Gujarat has announced that the families of victims will each receive approximately 4,000 rupees (~$48.61). The injured will receive 50,000 rupees (~$607.60).

Passerby hears screaming from storm drain, discovers naked woman who’d been missing for several weeks. The story only gets weirder from there.



A good Samaritan encountered a woman stuck in a storm drain Tuesday, and discovered she'd been missing for three weeks.

What are the details?

According to a Wednesday Newsweek report, the unnamed passerby heard screaming from a Delray Beach, Florida, storm drain.

When the passerby went to investigate the source of the sound, they discovered a naked woman trapped in the storm drain and immediately called authorities.

The Delray Beach Fire Rescue quickly arrived on the scene, where they had to remove a grate and utilize a ladder and harness to lift the woman out of the drain. The storm drain entrance, authorities noted, was also too small for an adult to fit through.

How did this even happen?

According to the Miami Herald, the woman, who is 43 years old, went swimming in a canal near her boyfriend's home on March 3.

"While she was swimming, she came across a doorway near a shallow part of the canal. She stated she entered the doorway and noticed a tunnel," an incident report read according to the outlet.

The report noted that the woman became curious when she saw the doorway, and began walking down the tunnel. That tunnel led to the next "and so on until she became lost," the Herald noted.

"The woman claims she was walking in the tunnels, lost, for about three weeks until she 'saw some light' and decided to sit there because she saw people walking by," the Herald added.

Her boyfriend reported her missing after 9 p.m. on March 3 to the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office, the outlet said.

No foul play suspected

The unnamed woman was transported to a nearby hospital for non-life-threatening injuries, including dehydration.

"She was lucky," Delray Beach Fire Rescue spokesperson Dani Moschella told Newsweek. "I don't know how much longer she would have been OK down there. The idea that somebody might be down there for any length of time is disturbing. It's dirty, dangerous, there are snakes, rats, garbage, dirt and leaves, anything that's on the street that washes into a sewer, and it smells terrible."

The woman, Moschella said, was too weak to stand on her own without assistance.

Delray Beach Police spokesperson Ted White said that investigators do not suspect any type of foul play.

"From the police department standpoint, we don't believe there was any type of crime committed," White explained. "It doesn't feel like she was taken against her will. It appears this was done by her own free will."

History of mental illness and drug use

The woman's identity had not been released at the time of this reporting, but her mother said that she suffers from an undisclosed mental illness and has a history of past drug use.

"The 43-year-old woman will now undergo a mental assessment," the outlet reported. "Her mother told police she has a history of mental illness and is known for 'doing odd things and making bad decisions when she is high on drugs,' according to the report. Police said the 43-year-old is a Methadone patient and that her last dose was the day prior to her disappearance."

DBFR rescued a woman trapped in a storm drain Tuesday morning, removing a grate and using a ladder and harness to r… https://t.co/0p7Wd4HPOC
— Delray Beach Fire Rescue (@Delray Beach Fire Rescue)1616515382.0

VIDEO: Boy slips off chairlift, grabs edge, dangles above the slopes — and all witnesses can do is shout encouragement for him to hold on



Liam Gratton had the ride of his life on Canada's Table Mountain over the weekend, CTV News reported.

But the 12-year-old snowboarder hadn't planned on it happening on his chairlift ride up the Saskatoon slopes, the station said.

What happened?

Liam told CTV that after a quick lift bar adjustment he simply "slipped off" the chair. His older brother Luke noted to the station that a safety bar was removed too early.

Image source: CTV News video screenshot

Either way, Liam was able to grab the edge of the chairlift before falling, CTV reported — and he was forced to continue hanging on through the trip up the slope.

Image source: CTV News video screenshot

Aaron Arcand and a friend saw the whole thing while riding the lift behind Liam, the station said: "Right in front of us all of a sudden we just saw the little boy there kind of looking on the side, and I think he got too close to the side and slipped."

Like others witnessing the scary moment, all they could do was watch and shout encouragement to Liam.

"We couldn't do anything, we just had to sit there," Arcand told CTV. "I started telling that boy to 'just hang on, don't let go, just keep on hanging man, just don't let go.' It was intense, a shocked feeling."

Arcand also pulled out his phone and recorded the ordeal, the station said.

Here's the full clip:

Kid Hangs From Chairlift After Slipping From Seat at Saskatchewan Ski Resortyoutu.be

Fortunately Liam was able to hang on all the way to the top:

Image source: CTV News video screenshot

Image source: YouTube screenshot

Arcand added to CTV that once he got to the top, too, he checked on Liam and complimented him on his upper body strength.

So, how do we tell Mom?

Liam's mother Kaelah Gratton told the station her sons informed her of Liam's adventure when they got home — but that she didn't quite understand. Then she saw the clip that was already quickly making the rounds on social media, and then she understood all too well.

"I watched it, and I watched it, and I just got sicker and sicker thinking about what would've happened if he would have fallen," she told CTV.

Image source: CTV News video screenshot

Table Mountain's general manager Lawrence Blouin told the station he's relieved that Liam held on: "Thank God, because it could have been a very serious incident."

Decorated police officer who won 7 life-saving awards dies after intentionally veering in front of out-of-control driver — to protect others: Report



A Tampa police officer is dead after he intentionally veered into the path of what appeared to be an out-of-control driver, according to reports.

Witnesses say that the officer, Master Patrol Officer Jesse Madsen, swerved into the path of a motorist who was erratically driving southbound down the northbound lanes of I-275 on Tuesday, WFLA-TV reported.

Authorities pronounced Madsen, a U.S. Marine combat vet, dead just hours after the crash.

What are the details?

Investigators say that Madsen — who won seven life-saving awards during his career as an officer of the law — intentionally swerved into the path of an oncoming vehicle in order to protect other motorists from imminent danger.

The driver of the other vehicle, 25-year-old Joshua Daniel Montague of Golden, Colorado, died as a result of the crash. It remains unknown at the time of this reporting why Montague was traveling southbound at a "high rate of speed" and "swerving through the lanes" of the interstate's northbound side.

According to Fox News, Tampa Police Chief Brian Dugan called Madsen a "guardian of this city" who will "never be forgotten."

"We have reason to believe that he had veered into this oncoming car to protect others," Dugan explained. "So when you look at someone who has earned seven life-saving awards, it's no surprise that he would take such swift action and do this."

The information, according to Dugan, was obtained through eyewitness accounts of the fatal crash.

The 17-year department veteran leaves behind a wife and three children, ages 16, 12, and 10.

His family told Fox News that Madsen was a "strong, courageous" man who dreamed of being a law enforcement official since the age of eight.

Julia Madsen, the late officer's stepmother, told the outlet, "I don't really know what to say other than he was extremely loved and was a very outgoing, strong, courageous guy who wanted to be a police officer since he was eight years old. He was the last one you think would die first, he was just so strong."

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor said that Madsen's family is "clearly devastated" by the loss.

"They are very, very thankful for the thoughts and prayers of the entire community," she added.

'We're talking about a cop's cop and a hero's hero'

Danny Alvarez with the Police Benevolent Association said that Madsen was a model officer.

"He served in the Marine Corps. He served overseas. He's a decorated combat veteran. He also served in the Florida National Guard. He served with three police units until he settled here at the Tampa Police Department," Alvarez said. "So service was nothing new to him."

Alvarez added, "When we talk about Jesse Madsen, we're talking about a cop's cop and a hero's hero. He went out the way he lived his life, and last night he put himself in between a car and a civilian and he knew the sacrifice he was making and he knew the risk and he chose to do it anyway."

Madsen's badge, number 507, will be retired and his name will be etched into the Tampa Police Fallen Officers Memorial, according to reports.

A memorial fund in honor of the late officer has been set up to benefit the family.