Army medic in fatal accident identified

Honoluluadvertiser.com

December 21, 2008

Motorcyclist from fatal collision identified

Advertiser Staff

The City Medical Examiner’s Office has identified the motorcyclist who died in a crash early Wednesday morning as Bryan Devlin, 24, of Honolulu.

Devlin died of multiple blunt force injuries. Polce reports said Devlin was speeding on Kamehameha Highway at about 12:45 a.m. when he struck a Nissan Altima driven by 35-year-old Gregg Gurtiza of Salt Lake.

Gurtiza was turning onto Camp Catlin Road when his vehicle was struck. Police said the motorcyclist and motorcycle penetrated the car’s passenger side and became lodged inside the vehicle, striking the car with such force it flipped the car over.

Federal guard, Army medic die in accident

Federal guard, medic die in Nimitz double fatality

By Leila Fujimori

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Dec 18, 2008

When Gregg Gurtiza of Salt Lake failed to arrive home late Tuesday night, his parents were not concerned.

Merlin and Karen Gurtiza of Salt Lake thought their youngest of four children had worked a double shift as a guard at the Federal Detention Center, adjacent to the airport.

Karen Gurtiza said she watched the morning news, which carried a report of a horrific accident on Nimitz Highway under the H-1 airport viaduct, where a motorcycle slammed into a car turning left.

She never thought the victim could be Gregg, 35.

But they received a grim call later yesterday morning from the city Medical Examiner’s Office.

The medical examiner said yesterday that Gurtiza died of multiple trauma blunt force injuries in the 12:45 a.m. crash.

Gurtiza, who was driving home after work, was turning left from Nimitz Highway onto Camp Catlin Road when he was hit by a motorcyclist who was traveling west, police said.

Police said the motorcycle came at such speed that it penetrated the passenger side of the black 2008 four-door Nissan sedan, causing it to roll over onto its roof.

The motorcyclist and his 2007 maroon Kawasaki were lodged inside the car, police said. He was also pronounced dead at the scene. They were the 43rd and 44th traffic fatalities for Oahu this year.

The motorcyclist was identified as a medic at Tripler Army Medical Center.

“You would think a guy in that profession — taking care of human life — would value that more than anything else,” said Gurtiza’s father.

He said military members are often involved in traffic accidents in the Nimitz area.

“They’re young, they like to have a good time, but it seems they cause a lot of the accidents and fatalities around here,” said Merlin Gurtiza. “At one time I was young and in the military. You got to weigh the good times and the value of people’s lives.”

Merlin Gurtiza said he could not grasp how a man in a car could be killed by a motorcycle. But he compared it to a bullet traveling at high speed.

Gregg Gurtiza graduated from a high school at Camp Zama on the outskirts of Tokyo and attended Honolulu Community College, where he studied criminal justice. He has been employed at the Federal Detention Center for about six years.

He is also survived by siblings Grant, Guy and Gay Tanap, all of Oahu.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/hawaiinews/20081218_federal_guard_medic_die_in_nimitz_double_fatality.html

Two killed in collision near airport

Honoluluadvertiser.com

December 17, 2008

Two killed in collision near Honolulu Airport

Advertiser Staff

Two men were killed early today when a speeding motorcycle broadsided a car near Honolulu International Airport, according to police vehicular homicide investigators.

The horrific impact of the 12:45 a.m. collision at the intersection of Kamehameha Highway and Camp Catlin Road left a 2007 Kawasaki motorcycle so deeply embedded in a 2008 Nissan Altima that only the cycle’s rear wheel was visible.

The Honolulu Medical Examiner’s office identified one of the victims as Gregg Gurtiza, 35, the car’s driver.

The name of the motorcycle operator, a 24-year-old man, was not released pending notification of family. Both men were pronounced dead at the scene at 1:19 a.m., according to Bryan Cheplic of the Honolulu Emergency Services Department.

Police said the motorcycle was speeding westbound on Kamehameha Highway when it struck the car, which had made a left turn headed toward Camp Catlin Road from Nimitz Highway. The impact caused the car to overturn, police said.

Today’s deaths are O‘ahu’s 43rd and 44th traffic fatalities of 2008 compared to 64 by this day last year.

Additional Facts

statewide fatality breakdown
As of today, 104 people have died in traffic accidents this year in Hawai‘i as compared to 127 by this date in 2007.

The updated 2008 island-by-island breakdown as compiled by The Advertiser:

O‘AHU (44) – Vehicle (20 deaths/19 collisions), pedestrian (13), motorcycle (6), moped (3), bicycle (2). Last fatal: Dec17. This month: 2. Last month: 1.
BIG ISLAND (27) – Vehicle (16), motorcycle (8), pedestrian (3). Last fatal: Dec. 13. This month: 2. Last month: 3.
MAUI (22) – Vehicle (13 deaths/12 collisions, includes two on Moloka‘i), motorcycle (7), pedestrian (2). Last fatal: Dec. 10. This month: 1. Last month: 4.
KAUA‘I (11) – Vehicle (10 deaths/8 collisions), pedestrian (1). Last fatal: Oct. 29. This month: 0. Last month: 0.

Soldier on motorcycle crashes into car, 2 dead

Motorcycle and Car Flip, 2 Killed

Written by Tim Sakahara – tsakahara@kgmb9.com

December 17, 2008 05:06 PM

The crash happened at 12:45 Wednesday morning.

One man involved lived in Salt Lake. The other is a soldier from Florida.

It’s one of the worst crashes police have seen in a while. The Nissan Altima was town bound on Nimitz Highway turning left onto Camp Catlin Road. The motorcycle was Ewa bound on Nimitz. That’s when the vehicles met.

Officers say the motorcycle was going so fast and the impact was so hard that the motorcycle went into the Nissan causing it to flip over.

“It indicates an incredibly excessive amount of speed,” said Lt. Darren Izumo, Honolulu Police Department.

Gregg Gurtiza was driving the Nissan. He worked at the Federal Detention Center near the Honolulu International Airport. His brother said he usually got off work at 10 p.m. but may have had to work later. He believes he was on his way home. The 35 year old was the youngest of four kids.

“He’s the baby brother, just your typical local boy growing up here, into the same type of thing any other kid or adult is into, cars, ultimate fighting that kind of stuff. He’s going to be very missed. It’s the holidays, I’m going to have to return my Christmas present to him so it’s just going to hit us,” said Grant Gurtiza, victim’s brother.

Hours after the crash an army buddy of the man on the motorcycle planted some flowers at the crash scene. He says he was an army medic and had served in Afghanistan. He was single and from Florida. His name is being withheld until his family is notified.

Police are not sure if drugs or alcohol played a factor.

Last Updated ( December 17, 2008 08:13 PM )

Military jet crash in San Diego kills 3 on ground

Military jet crash in San Diego kills 3 on ground

By ELLIOT SPAGAT – 3 hours ago

SAN DIEGO (AP) – A fighter jet returning to a Marine base after a training exercise crashed in flames in a San Diego neighborhood Monday, killing three people on the ground, leaving one missing and destroying two homes.

The pilot of the F/A-18D Hornet jet ejected safely just before the crash around noon at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar. Explosions rocked a neighborhood of half-million-dollar homes, sending flames and plumes of smoke skyward.

“The house shook; the ground shook. It was like I was frozen in my place,” said Steve Krasner, who lives a few blocks from the crash. “It was bigger than any earthquake I ever felt.”

Three people were killed in a house where two children, a mother and a grandmother were believed to be at the time of the crash, but fire officials did not immediately know who died. Another person remained missing, and officials said the search was suspended until Tuesday morning.

“We just know that four people were inside, and three of them have been accounted for,” Fire Department spokesman Maurice Luque said.

The pilot, who ended up hanging by his parachute from a tree in a canyon beneath the neighborhood, was in stable condition at a naval hospital in San Diego, said Miramar spokeswoman 1st Lt. Katheryn Putnam. The pilot was returning from training on the carrier USS Abraham Lincoln off the San Diego coast when the plane went down, she said.

Putnam had no details on a possible cause. Investigators will review information from a flight data recorder, and there was no indication the pilot was using alcohol or drugs, she said.

The Navy recently inspected hundreds of F/A-18 Hornets built by Boeing Co. after discovering “fatigue cracks” on more than a dozen aircraft. The Navy announced last month it had grounded 10 of the jets and placed flight restrictions on another 20 until repairs could be made.

The inspectors checked the Hornets for cracks in a hinge that connects the aileron – flaps that help stabilize the jet in flight – to the wing.

An F-18, a supersonic jet used widely in the Marine Corps and Navy and by the stunt-flying Blue Angels, costs about $57 million. An F-18 crashed at Miramar – known as the setting for the movie “Top Gun” – in November 2006, and that pilot also ejected safely.

Authorities said smoke rising from the wreckage was toxic and evacuated about 20 homes. By Monday night only six homes remained evacuated because they were uninhabitable, said San Diego police spokeswoman Monica Munoz.

There was little sign of the plane in the smoking ruins, but a piece of cockpit sat on the roof of one home, and a charred jet engine lay on a street near a parked camper. A parachute was visible in the canyon below a row of houses.

The neighborhood in the University City section of San Diego smelled of jet fuel and smoke. Ambulances, fire trucks and police cars choked the streets. A Marine Corps bomb disposal truck was there, although police assured residents there was no ordnance aboard the jet.

Neighbors described chaos after the jet tore into the houses and flames erupted.

“It was pandemonium,” said Paulette Glauser, 49, who lived six houses away. “Neighbors were running down toward us in a panic, of course.”

Jets frequently streak over the neighborhood, two miles from the base, but residents said the imperiled aircraft was flying extremely low.

Jordan Houston was looking out his back window three blocks from the crash when the plane passed by. A parachute ejected from the craft, followed by a loud explosion and a mushroom-shaped cloud.

Houston, 25, said a truck exploded after the driver backed over flaming debris and then jumped from the cab yelling, “I just filled up my gas tank.”

The crash was near University City High School, where students were kept locked in classrooms after the crash. Barbara Prince, a school secretary, said there was no damage to the campus and no one was injured.

Neighbors jolted by the crash said they initially thought it was the sound of gunshots, a train derailment or tractor-trailer trucks colliding.

“It was quite violent,” said Ben Dishman, 55, who was resting on his couch after having back surgery. “I hear the jets from Miramar all the time. I often worry that one of them will hit one of these homes. It was inevitable. I feel very lucky.”

Associated Press writers Michael R. Blood and Alicia Chang in Los Angeles and Erica Werner in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hukCDXicy0DS1K2Rva8_VdP1d2hgD94UVQQ80

Fire ruins special forces mini submarine

A six-hour blaze damaged a special-warfare minisub Sunday

Navy to start probe of sub fire

By Gregg K. Kakesako

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Nov 11, 2008

The Navy will begin investigating today a battery fire that damaged the nation’s only special-warfare minisub, a costly and problem-plagued stealth boat that was getting a recharge at Pearl Harbor’s 22-acre SEAL facility on Waipio Peninsula.

Advanced SEAL Delivery System minisub

» In service: 1 (Pearl Harbor)

» Length: 65 feet

» Weight: 60 tons

» Crew: Pilot, submarine officer; co-pilot, SEAL officer

» Payload: Up to 16 SEALs

» Mission: Clandestine infiltration

» Range: Classified (at least 115 miles on a battery charge; can dive as deep as 200 feet)

» Transported: Piggyback on the deck of a nuclear attack submarine

Source: U.S. Navy

The Navy has not yet determined the cause of the fire or the extent of damage.

The black, 65-foot Advanced SEAL Delivery System minisub was undergoing routine maintenance in its shore-based facility at 8:30 p.m. Sunday when Navy personnel monitoring the battery recharging process noticed sparks and flames coming from near some of the battery compartments, officials said.

The building was immediately evacuated, and seven trucks and 25 federal firefighters responded but it took six hours to extinguish the fire and cool any remaining hot spots in the battery compartment, the Navy reported yesterday.

A investigation, led by the Naval Special Warfare Command and supported by experts from Naval Sea Systems Command and the Navy Safety Center, was expected to begin today.

The battery-powered minisub, designed to ride piggyback on an attack sub to within range of a hostile coast or other target, has been part of a troubled program that began in 1992. The vessel was delivered to the U.S. Naval Special Warfare Command in 2001 and assigned to Pearl Harbor’s SEAL Delivery Vehicle Team 1 in 2003.

There were initial problems with its propeller system, then problems with the electrical system and batteries.

A 2003 General Accounting Office report said the electrical system repeatedly shorted out and drained its silver-zinc batteries more quickly than the Navy projected. The zinc batteries were replaced with lithium-ion batteries.

The GAO report said the program, which initially called for six vessels, was to cost $527 million but rose to more than $2 billion.

Defense Industry Daily reported in April that “technical, reliability, and 400 percent cost overrun issues proved nearly insuperable.” Plans for six subs were halted in 2006, and the remaining ongoing effort was directed “to boost the performance of the existing sub and complete its operational testing,” the publication said.

The cigar-shaped minisub, which weighs 60 tons, is big enough to accommodate 16 SEALs, including two operators.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20081111_Navy_to_start_probe_of_sub_fire.html?page=all&c=y

Military truck veers, kills woman in head-on crash

HonoluluAdvertiser.com

October 25, 2008

Marine truck veered across lane

57-year-old woman who died at the scene of the crash indentified

Advertiser Staff

The woman killed in a head-on collision Thursday in Hau’ula has been identified as Vicki Norman, according to the Honolulu Medical Examiner’s office.

The 57-year-old Hau’ula resident was driving a silver Chrysler van south on Kamehameha Highway when a Marine troop transport truck veered into her lane, police said.

The collision pinned the woman in her vehicle, police said, and she died at the scene.

The seven-ton Marine truck, with two Marines inside, was on its way to Marine Corps Base Hawai’i from the Kahuku Training Area.

The 19-year-old driver and 20-year-old passenger were uninjured but were taken to Tripler Army Medical Center for evaluation. The Marines and the truck are with the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment based at Kane’ohe Bay.

The accident happened shortly before 2:30 p.m. in the vicinity of 53-729 Kamehameha Highway near Puhuli Street, police said.

The medical examiner said the woman died of multiple blunt force injuries due to a motor vehicle collision.

Marine vehicle caused fatal crash in Hauula

Marine vehicle caused fatal crash in Hauula, police say

By Mary Adamski

POSTED: 02:51 p.m. HST, Oct 24, 2008

A 57-year-old Hauula woman died yesterday when a 7-ton Marine truck veered across the centerline of Kamehameha Highway and collided head-on with her minivan.

The woman, whose name was not released, was pronounced dead the scene, 53-729 Kamehameha Highway in Hauula.

The crash happened about 2:15 p.m. yesterday as the Medium Tactical Vehicle, a transport vehicle, was headed toward Kahuku and the 2006 Chrysler van was headed toward Kaneohe.

Police said the Marine truck veered into the woman’s lane as it approached a bend to the right and hit the van head-on, pinning the woman inside.

A witness said the woman was an employee at the Ponds at Punaluu nursing care facility.

The two male Marines in the truck, ages 19 and 20, were not injured, but were sent to Tripler Army Medical Center for evaluation, according to a release from Marine Corps Base Hawaii.

Police said it is not yet known whether the crashed involved speeding, but investigators have ruled out alcohol as a factor.

The woman was wearing a seat belt and her airbag did deploy. The two Marines were not wearing seat restraints.

Kamehameha Highway was closed to traffic in both directions for five hours after the crash.

The truck was returning to the Marine Corps base in Kaneohe from the Kahuku Training Area, according to the Marine base public information office. Members of the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, they were on a training exercise in preparation for deployment to the Middle East next year, the release said.

Star-Bulletin reporter Gene Park contributed to this story

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/breaking/33282169.html

Marine truck crossed center line in fatal accident

KITV.com

Woman Killed In Hauula Crash

Victim Was Passenger In Head-On Collision With Marine Truck

October 24, 2008

PUNALUU, Hawaii — Traffic investigators are looking into what caused a deadly crash in Hauula Thursday afternoon.

The head-on crash between a minivan and a military transport truck happened near the corner of Kamehameha Highway and Puhuli Street at about 2:30 p.m.

A woman in her 50s was pronounced dead at the scene, an Emergency Medical Services spokesman said. She was a passenger in one of the vehicles, EMS spokesman Bryan Cheplic said.

The Marines’ vehicle crossed the centerline, Honolulu police said.

Two other people were treated at the scene and released, Cheplic said.

Police closed Kamehameha Highway in both directions at the scene while the Honolulu Police Department’s Traffic Division investigated the crash. They reopened the highway at about 8:30 p.m.

Hauula woman, 57, killed in head-on collision with Marine truck

October 23, 2008

Hauula woman, 57, killed in head-on collision

Advertiser staff

A 57-year-old woman was killed today in Hau‘ula when a seven-ton Marine truck veered across the center line and into the path of her van, according to police.

The death is O‘ahu’s 38th traffic fatality of the year and sixth this month. Four of the six deaths have occurred over the last eight days.

The 2:15 p.m. head-on collision on Kamehameha Highway near the intersection of Puhuli Street involved a 2006 Chrysler van and medium tactical vehicle replacement truck from Marine Corps Base Hawaii at Kane‘ohe Bay.

The truck, driven by a 19-year-old male Marine, was northbound on Kamehameha Highway and approaching a right bend in the roadway when it veered into the southbound lane and into the path of the van, said vehicular homicide supervising investigation Sgt. Alan Vegas.

The woman, a Hau‘ula resident, was alone in the van. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

The Honolulu Medical Examiner’s office did not identify the victim pending confirmation of her identity.

Traffic in the area was affected for over five hours. Kamehameha Highway was reopened shortly before 7:30 p.m.

The truck’s driver and a 20-year-old male passenger were taken to the Tripler Medical Center in good condition, Vegas said.

Marine Corps Base Hawaii said the Marines and truck are assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment.

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