Tag Archives: #AccidentalDeath

2012 May 05: Colerain community grieves loss of students

5:09 PM, May 4, 2012  |  0 Comments
Two teen girls were killed in a car crash with a semi tractor-trailer May 4. Senior Miranda Lane, 17, of Colerain Township, and her passenger, Mathilde Jessen, 16, a junior, of Green Township, were pronounced dead at the scene of the 4:15 p.m. crash, according to the Butler County Sheriff’s Office. This photo shows where the truck came from the left on Rt. 127 towards the intersection with 73.
Two teen girls were killed in a car crash with a semi tractor-trailer May 4. Senior Miranda Lane, 17, of Colerain Township, and her passenger, Mathilde Jessen, 16, a junior, of Green Township, were pronounced dead at the scene of the 4:15 p.m. crash, according to the Butler County Sheriff’s Office. This photo shows where the truck came from the left on Rt. 127 towards the intersection with 73. | The Enquirer/Tony Jones

The other was a foreign exchange student who thrived on travel and wanted to roam the world capturing stories as a photojournalist.

But in the blink of an eye, they were gone.

The lives of Colerain High School junior Miranda Lane and her passenger, junior Mathilde Jessen, were cut short 4:15 p.m. Thursday when Miranda failed to yield at a stop sign to a semi tractor-trailer on U.S. 127 and Ohio 73 in Butler County.

The two were pronounced dead at the scene.

Now, three families – one an ocean away – and a local school community of more than 2,200 students are grieving.

Both girls were honor roll students who were well-liked among classmates, their families said.

Mathilde worked two jobs in her native city of Svendborg, Denmark, until she could afford to enter into a foreign exchange program at International Student Exchange. She arrived in August and has spent the past year living as an American teenager, absorbing the culture and fitting in with her host family.

“She wanted to know what America was like,” said Elaine Schumacher, 54, a receptionist at Colerain High whose family hosted Mathilde in their Green Township home.

Miranda attended classes part of the day at the high school and also was enrolled in a health-tech program at Butler Tech in Fairfield Township. She, too, was close with her family and envisioned a life of serving others.

“She was a wonderful person inside and out,” said Miranda’s aunt, Donna Henderson of Florence.

The two girls were close, said Pauletta Crowley, spokeswoman for Northwest Schools. Grief counselors spent Friday at Colerain High, talking to students.

Miranda was driving a Honda Civic when the Butler County Sheriff’s Office says she failed to yield at a stop sign to an oncoming tractor-trailer driven by Steve Fish, 48, of West Harrison, Ind. He was uninjured.

A third vehicle, a pickup, was also struck. Its driver, Edward Schatzle, 61, of Milford Township, was taken to University Hospital with minor injuries.

The crash remains under investigation.

Steve Fish’s wife, Donna, said her husband has been advised by his company not to discuss the incident. But she said he feels terrible about it and tried to stop his truck after the Civic pulled out in front of him.

“He is requesting prayers for the girls’ families,” she said.

Both girls, who were wearing seatbelts, died of internal injuries, said Andy Willis, an investigator with the Butler County Coroner’s Office.

Miranda was en route to her prom date’s house in Oxford. She was going to pick up a permission slip for her mother to sign so she could attend Talawanda High School’s prom Saturday night.

Mathilde went along for the ride.

Miranda’s royal blue prom dress with pink sequins was still at her Colerain Township home Friday. Her family plans to bury her in it.

“She loved blue. It was her favorite color. She just turned 17 on April 29,” Henderson said. “I can’t believe this happened. It is like a bad dream and I am going to wake up and see her face here.”

Miranda was close to her entire family, especially her mother, Cheryl Biehl, and considered her a best friend.

“Cheryl is devastated,” said her cousin Shelley Henderson of Florence.

Relatives said Miranda’s mother, who declined an interview request, knew something was wrong when her daughter didn’t return from the trip or respond to text messages and phone calls.

A law enforcement official arrived at their home at 8:30 p.m. When Biehl saw him at the door, she knew her daughter was gone.

In Green Township, Elaine and Bob Schumacher’s family planned a big dinner celebration Friday, Bob’s 55th birthday. Instead, the family mourned Mathilde’s death.

She fit right in with the family, accompanying them on a hiking and camping trip over spring break to Cumberland Falls in Corbin, Ky.

“She wasn’t a foreign exchange student with us,” Elaine Schumacher said. “She was a family member.”

Their youngest child, Maria, 17, was the same age as Mathilde, and the two became as close as sisters. She even called Elaine Schumacher “Mama.”

“She felt like my daughter. I loved her as my daughter and disciplined her like my daughter,” Schumacher said, breaking down into tears. “And I grieve for her like a daughter.”

When sheriff’s deputies broke the news to the family Thursday night, she said she requested that International Student Exchange alert Mathilde’s family in Denmark, where she leaves behind her parents, a twin sister and younger brother.

Mathilde’s international status presents a bit of a challenge. Her body must be held here about two weeks and cannot be flown home until U.S. and Danish officials identify it. Once her body leaves the Butler County Morgue, it will be held at Frederick Funeral Home in Colerain Township.

When services are held in Denmark, the Schumachers plan to attend.

Elaine Schumacher said she spoke on the phone with Mathilde’s mother Thursday.

“They are beside themselves, but she did tell me she didn’t think Mathilde could have been in any better place in America than where she was. She knew she was getting the experience of a lifetime and was thrilled for her daughter.

“I told her how sorry I was and she said ‘Elaine, don’t be sorry. There was nothing anyone could do. We both shared a beautiful girl.’ “

2014 Apr 07: Schweizer (16) stirbt beim Klettern in Costa Rica (German)

07. April 2014 15:01; Akt: 07.04.2014 15:01 Print

Ein Schweizer Austauschschüler ist in einer Kleinstadt in Costa Rica bei einer Kletterübung in den Tod gestürzt. Der 16-Jährige soll keinen Sicherungsgurt getragen haben.
storybild
Der Unfall ereignete sich am Fluss Uruca im Park Centro de Conservación in Santa Ana. (Screenshot: Google Maps)

Tragischer Unfall in der Kleinstadt Santa Ana im Zentrum von Costa Rica: Ein 16 Jahre alter Schweizer ist bei einer Abseilübung in eine Schlucht beim Fluss Uruca aus einer Höhe von 25 Meter abgestürzt. Er kam dabei ums Leben.

Wie die Zeitung «La Nacion» schreibt, habe sich eine Gruppe Jugendlicher am Freitagnachmittag beim Park Centro de Conservación Santa Ana, etwa 10 Kilometer von der Haupstadt San José entfernt, abgeseilt. Gegen 15.40 Uhr ging bei den Rettungskräften ein Notruf ein. Der Schweizer Austauschstudent war bei seinem Sturz auf Steinen aufgeschlagen und hatte sich schwere Kopf- und Brustverletzungen zugezogen.

Probleme mit der Ausrüstung

Ein Team des Roten Kreuzes musste zunächst 1,5 Kilometer durch unwegsames Gelände gehen, bevor es beim Verletzten ankam. «Er war noch am Leben, als wir ihn fanden», erzählt Notarzt Agner Morales. Der Teenager habe aber aufgrund der schweren Verletzungen kurz darauf das Bewusstsein verloren. Um 17.11 Uhr erklärte Morales den Jugendlichen für tot.

Die Klettergruppe sei nicht gut ausgerüstet gewesen, weiss «La Nacion». Offenbar hatten sie sich ohne die nötigen Handschuhe und Sicherungsgurte abgeseilt. Auch die Bergung soll aufgrund mangelnder Ausrüstung nicht rasch genug erfolgt sein.

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Google translation

07. April 2014 15:01; Act: 07.04.2014 15:01
Swiss (16) died while climbing in Costa Rica

A Swiss exchange student is overthrown in a small town in Costa Rica on a climbing exercise in death. The 16-year-old is said to have worn a safety belt.

Tragic accident in the town of Santa Ana in the center of Costa Rica: A 16-year-old Swiss has crashed at an abseiling into a gorge near the river Uruca from a height of 25 meters. He lost his life.

As the newspaper La Nacionwrites, a group of young people have removed on Friday afternoon at the park Centro de Conservación Santa Ana, about 10 kilometers from the capital city of San José, abseil. Against 15.40 clock was taking a emergency call the emergency services. The Swiss exchange student was beaten at his fall on rocks and had severe head and chest injuries suffered.

Equipment problems

A team of the Red Cross had initially 1.5 km walk through rough terrain before it got to the injured. “He was still alive when we found him,” says Morales emergency Agner. The teenager but I lost consciousness due to severe injuries shortly after. To 17.11 clock Morales declared the young people dead.

The climbing group was not well equipped, white La Nacion“. Apparently they had roped without the necessary safety belts and gloves. The recovery should not be carried out quickly enough due to lack of equipment.

2012 Dec 05: Student died while living her dream studying abroad

Alexis Stevens | The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
12:01 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012

Traveling to Indonesia was just the beginning of what Morgan Lide had planned.

The 17-year-old Cobb County girl wanted to travel the world, learn another culture and later study international affairs. Morgan was a talented artist, and her spirit of adventure led her to give up her senior year at Wheeler High School, opting instead for a prestigious study abroad program.

Student died while living her dream studying abroad photo
Morgan Lide of Marietta attended Wheeler High School for three years before beginning the exchange program this fall in Bali, Indonesia.

But over the weekend, a knock on the door at her parents’ home in east Cobb brought worse news than the family could ever have imagined. Morgan had drowned off the coast of Bali while swimming at Kuta Beach.

A very good swimmer who had spent many summers on the swim team, Morgan was pulled under by a rip tide and her host family lost sight of her. She was later found on the shore, but could not be resuscitated by lifeguards.

Tuesday night, Morgan’s parents and sister spoke of Morgan’s legacy and passion for life, vowing that how she lived should serve as an inspiration to others.

Student died while living her dream studying abroad photo
While in Indonesia, Morgan Lide taught English to children. Credit: Lide family

“She wanted to travel,” her mom, Lori Lide, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “She was looking for something to do for the summer.”

But when she learned of the Kennedy-Lugar Youth Exchange and Study Abroad Program, her mind was made up. The program sends students from non-Muslim countries to Muslim areas, but Morgan didn’t care where she was going.

“She just said, ‘I just wanna go,’” Lori Lide said.

Morgan left in September and never looked back, her family said. She blogged about her experiences abroad, posting pictures of life with her host family.

Student died while living her dream studying abroad photo
Lori Lide holds a piece of her daughter’s artwork. Photo: Alexis Stevens / astevens@ajc.com

“Life as I know it is about to end in just one day,” Morgan wrote in September. “Tomorrow morning I leave my family, friends and hometown, something that I should be completely overwhelmed by, but that somehow I feel strangely calm about.”

For her older sister Catherine, Morgan’s last day in Cobb County lives on in the form of dozens of pictures taken at the county fair. Catherine Lide, a mechanical engineering student at Georgia Tech, said her sister wanted to go to Tech, too.

Morgan was an honor student in the math and science magnet program at Wheeler, her parents said. But she didn’t just excel at academics in high school.

Student died while living her dream studying abroad photo
A self-portrait was one of several pieces of Morgan Lide’s artwork her family displayed at their home Tuesday night. Photo: Alexis Stevens / astevens@ajc.com

“While she was there, she discovered she had a passion for art,” her mother said.

The “passion” for drawing, painting and sculpture led Morgan to be selected for the Governor’s Honor Program in art, an honor she had to pass on because of her plans to study abroad.

Since learning of Morgan’s death, her family said they have been overwhelmed by the outpouring of support from neighbors, friends and classmates. Her father, Chuck Lide, said it was a small comfort to know how many lives his younger daughter touched.