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| A New Jersey state trooper who was in the motorcade is
evacuated after the crash Thursday night. |
CAMDEN, New Jersey (AP) -- Gov. Jon S. Corzine was apparently not
wearing his seat belt as required by law when his official SUV
crashed into a guardrail, leaving the governor hospitalized in
critical condition, a spokesman said Friday.
A state trooper was driving Corzine to a meeting between Don Imus
and the Rutgers women's basketball team Thursday night when another
vehicle, swerving to avoid a pickup truck, hit the governor's SUV
and sent it into the guard rail on the Garden State Parkway.
The crash broke the governor's leg, six ribs, his sternum and a
vertebra. Authorities were searching for the pickup truck driver
blamed for causing it.
Corzine, 60, did not suffer any brain damage in the crash. But he
won't be able to resume his duties as governor for several days, if
not weeks, and he won't walk normally for months, Dr. Robert Ostrum
said after performing surgery on the governor Thursday night at
Cooper University Hospital.
Friday morning, the hospital's trauma chief, Dr. Steven E. Ross,
said Corzine was stable and improving, and that he could be removed
from a ventilator within the next few days. Corzine remained heavily
sedated because the pain from chest injuries made it difficult to
breathe, Ross said.
Senate President Richard Codey became acting governor about 7 p.m.
Thursday after Corzine's office notified him that the governor had
been injured.
'He's in serious shape'
"He's in serious shape, but he's alive and going to survive.
Hopefully, he'll be back to work in a few weeks," Codey said Friday
on WNBC-TV.
At a Friday afternoon news conference, Codey requested that every
house of worship in New Jersey offer prayers for Corzine and his
family this weekend.
Corzine was riding in the front passenger's seat of the SUV when a
white pickup truck swerved to avoid a red pickup truck that had
moved onto the highway from the shoulder, State Police
Superintendent Rick Fuentes said. The white pickup hit the passenger
side of the SUV, sending it skidding into a guardrail. The red
pickup left the scene.
"I'm sure every red pickup truck is being looked at by neighbors and
everybody else, so I'm sure they'll find it," Codey said Friday
afternoon.
Fuentes said it was unclear whether the governor was wearing his
seat belt at the time of the crash, but Corzine spokesman Anthony
Coley said Friday that it appeared he was not.
Seat belts are mandatory for everyone in front seats in New Jersey;
the fine for violating the law is $46.
Troopers in a vehicle following Corzine's administered first aid and
called for help. Corzine, Trooper Robert Rasinski and a
gubernatorial aide were flown by helicopter to the hospital.
Rasinski had minor injuries and the aide was fine.
When Corzine arrived at the hospital, doctors said he was conscious
but had several injuries: a femur broken in two places that had
lacerated his skin, a broken sternum, six broken ribs on each side,
a head laceration and a minor fracture on a lower vertebra.
Ostrum said a rod was inserted in Corzine's left leg, and additional
operations were scheduled for Saturday and Monday. The injuries were
not considered life-threatening, but it would be at least three to
six months before Corzine could walk normally, he said.
"He's got a pretty significant rehab in front of him," Ostrum said.
The crash occurred around 6 p.m. while Corzine was en route from
Atlantic City to the governor's mansion in Princeton to moderate a
meeting between the Rutgers women's basketball team and radio
personality Don Imus.
Imus was fired from his CBS radio program Thursday amid furor about
racially charged comments he made about the team on air. The
closed-door meeting went on without Corzine, and lasted for about
three hours.
Corzine, a Democrat who gave up his seat in the U.S. Senate to
become governor, went into politics after being ousted from Goldman
Sachs, where he had been CEO, in a power dispute in 1999. He was
elected to the Senate the following year.
The acting governor, Codey, also served as acting governor for about
14 months before Corzine took office last year following former Gov.
James McGreevey's resignation over an extramarital affair with a
man.
Corzine was the third straight New Jersey governor to break a leg
while in office. McGreevey broke his left leg in 2002 during a
nighttime walk on the beach, and Christie Whitman broke her right
leg while skiing in the Swiss Alps in 1999.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.