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Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Schoharie New York limousine crash

Schoharie New York limousine crash --- ===

Can/Has a terrorist attack ever been staged to look like an accident caused by a faulty vehicle, improper license or dangerous hill or all 3? There are plenty of reasons to blame the crash on the hill, the brakes that failed inspection, the driver who did not have improper licence but do all these fully explain why investigators still aren't sure the brakes may not have even been applied?

October 6, 2018 Schoharie New York limousine crash In the early afternoon a stretched 2001 Ford Excursion limousine travelling down a hill failed to stop at a troublesome intersection at the bottom of a steep grade where the road ended and crossed a T. It crashed at the junction of New York state routes 30 and 30A north of Schoharie, 40 miles (64 km) west of Albany, the state capital, killing 20—the driver, all 17 passengers, and hitting a parked car and two pedestrians who were in a nearby parking lot.[1][2]  It is not clear why the limo was even at an intersection that was banned for truck traffic after heavy trucks had crashed and failed to stop at the steep hill in the city as in the one-hour car trip between Amsterdam and Cooperstown Schoharie appears to be out of the way.(1)  As of October 11,  officials had not announced whether there was a brake failure (5) or if  they had determined if brakes were even applied  (4)  as there are no skid marks in the road, only track marks in the grass  (3).  However an state inspection found numerous issues with the vehicle and the brake system failed inspection and the state DOT placed a sticker taking the vehicle out of service  Though repairs  were made, DOT did not re-inspsect and certify the car to be back on the road. (1)   On Aug. 25 a state trooper stopped the limo in Saratoga Springs and issued violations to the company and to Lisinicchia that he was operating the limo without the proper license but the trooper did not have the legal authority to seize the plates or the vehicle during that stop,(1) 

The driver lacked the neccesary commercial driver's license. WNYT also learned that Lisinicchia had several outstanding traffic tickets in Saratoga Springs, enough that his license should have been suspended; however a clerical error had prevented the paperwork from being filed.[18]

Further investigation led to disclosures that other Prestige vehicles had failed inspections in the past. The company's address was a hotel in Gansevoort, north of Albany, and its owner, Shahed Hussain, was provisionally identified by The New York Times as a former Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) informant in the Newburgh Four terrorism case who posed as a jihadist recruiter and had previously avoided prosecution for his alleged involvement in a scheme to sell false identification while he was employed at the state's Department of Motor Vehicles. Police were unable to interview him after the accident as he was in Pakistan.[15]

It is the worst transportation-related disaster in the state and the nation in a decade since a plane crashed into a house outside Buffalo in 2009, killing 50;[3] it is also the deadliest road transportation disaster in the U.S. since a 2005 bus fire in Wilmer, Texas, killed 23 nursing home residents evacuating from the path of Hurricane Rita.[4]

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Schoharie limousine crash
DateOctober 6, 2018
Time1:55 p.m.
LocationIntersection of New York state routes 30 and 30ASchoharie, New York, United States
Coordinates42.7001°N 74.3018°W
CauseUnder investigation
Deaths20 (18 in vehicle, 2 bystanders)
Arrest(s)1
AccusedNauman Hussain (companyoperator)
ChargesCriminally negligent homicide
In the early afternoon of October 6, 2018, a stretch limousine crashed at the junction of New York state routes 30 and 30A north of Schoharie (/skˈhɛər/skoh-HAIR-ee), 30 miles (48 km) west of Albany, killing 20—the driver, all 17 passengers, and two pedestrians who were in a nearby parking lot.[1][2] The passengers were mostly from communities around the Capital District, primarily Amsterdam, where they had gathered to begin their trip. They were on their way to celebrate a 30th birthday at Brewery Ommegang near Cooperstown. Among them were four sisters and two recently married couples.
It was the deadliest transportation-related disaster in the United States since the 2009 Colgan Air Flight 3407 crash outside Buffalo killed 50;[3] it was also the deadliest road transportation disaster in the U.S. since a 2005 bus fire in Wilmer, Texas, killed 23 nursing home residents evacuating from the path of Hurricane Rita.[4]
Investigation of the accident has revealed pre-existing problems with the limousine, the driver and the limousine company. The vehicle had deficient brakes; as a result of failing two inspections due to that and other issues, the state had ordered it out of service. The vehicle was only certified for 10 seats, but had 18 installed. The driver also lacked the required endorsement to his license for carrying 15 or more passengers at a time. After the New York State Police (NYSP) determined that the owner was aware of these issues and rented the vehicle out anyway, he was arrested on a charge of criminally negligent homicide.[5]
Larger issues have also been implicated. The National Transportation Safety Board has indicated that it is looking at whether the safety regulations governing limousines, which critics have called particularly lax, are sufficient to protect passengers in light of earlier, less deadly crashes. The intersection of the two highways, which many residents say remains a frequent accident site due to its location at the bottom of a long steep slope on NY 30 despite efforts by the state to reduce that risk, has also been cited as a possible contributing factor.

Background[edit]

Axel Steenburg and his new wife Amy, of Amsterdam, New York, 30 miles (48 km) west of Albany, had planned a group outing for themselves, their siblings, and close friends at Brewery Ommegang, where he had celebrated his bachelor party in June,[6]south of Cooperstown on October 6, 2018, to celebrate Amy’s 30th birthday.[7] So that all guests could drink freely, Steenburg arranged for a party bus to take the group there and back. On the morning of the party, the group, ranging in age from 24 to 34, gathered at the Steenburg home. It included all three of Amy's sisters, two of whom were also accompanied by their husbands, and Axel's brother.[8]
The party's reservation at Ommegang was for noon that day,[7] but the night before, Axel learned that the bus he had arranged for had broken down.[6] He was able to arrange another ride through Prestige Limousine Services, a small operator based in Gansevoort, north of Albany outside Saratoga Springs. They were able to send a stretch limousine that would hold 18 people, one more than was in the group that would make the trip.[7][a]
Prestige dispatched a 2001 Ford Excursion expanded to seat the additional passengers. Unbeknownst to Steenburg or anyone in his group, the vehicle had failed two inspections earlier that year. The issues that had led to those failures included its brakes, and the state Department of Transportation (DOT) had ordered it to be taken out of service in September, with inspectors placing a sticker reading "unserviceable" across its windshield, but it had been removed before it was driven to Amsterdam. It had also been listed for sale on Craigslist two days earlier, advertised as "DOT ready".[7]
Driver Scott Lisinicchia, of Lake George, had complained at times about the safety of the company's vehicles. His wife recalled having overheard him say he would not drive a particular vehicle at some times when Prestige called. While he had driven trucks in the past and held a valid commercial driver's license (CDL), it lacked the "P" endorsement needed for him to transport 15 or more passengers at a time.[7][9] Lisinicchia had been cited for driving without this endorsement; he also had several outstanding traffic tickets in Saratoga Springs, enough that his license should have been suspended. However, a clerical error had prevented the paperwork from being filed.[10]

Crash[edit]

A two-lane paved road curves gently ahead of the viewer in a mostly wooded area under a mostly cloudy sky. There is a left-turn lane immediately ahead and another road leaving at a right angle to the right, going slightly uphill, with steel guardrails on the right. Black and white signs at the right identify the road ahead as "30A", the road to the right as "30", and state that the road ahead will lead the driver to an "88", signed in red, white and blue.
The accident site, photographed in 2012. The limo came down NY 30, from the right, and went across the road into the parking lot whose driveway is at left
Delayed by the change in vehicle, the group left Amsterdam late, well after their noon reservation at Ommegang. The Excursion left the city by heading south on New York State Route 30 (NY 30), a long winding two-lane rural road.[7]
Text messages from the passengers to friends and family indicated that the limousine's problems were obvious to those riding in it. Erin McGowan wrote her aunt at 1:37 p.m. that the limousine was not high-quality and its engine was apparently unusually loud. "When we get to the brewery we will all b deaf", McGowan wrote,[11]with several Face with Tears of Joy emojis appended. Three minutes later, Allison King texted her fiancé that the brakes were burning and the vehicle was coasting.[7]
In Duanesburg, the 20-mile (32 km) section of Route 30 the limousine was traveling becomes hillier as the road veers east into the Schoharie Creek valley and undulatesmore.[12] Just north of the blinker at NY 7, the highway reaches a height of land at 1,227 feet (374 m) in elevation, from which it descends almost 600 feet (180 m) in the next two miles (3.2 km) to its junction with NY 30A.[13] As it crosses over Interstate 88, signs direct trucks to use Route 7 instead. For those drivers who continue south on Route 30, many more signs warn drivers about the steep grade ahead, through which the speed limit is 55 miles per hour (89 km/h).[7]
External video
 Albany Times-Union video with driver's view of Route 30 from Route 7 to the crash site
At the bottom of the hill is a three-way intersection where NY 30A forks off to the north while NY 30 turns southward toward Schoharie, two miles (3.2 km) away. Southbound traffic on NY 30 must stop; a sign warns of this several hundred feet uphill of the intersection.[7] When the Excursion reached the junction, at 1:55 p.m., it did not stop.[14]
The vehicle continued into the parking lot of the nearby Apple Barrel Country Store where it struck a parked 2015 Toyota Highlander, which in turn struck two pedestrians in the lot,[15] and then came to a stop in a gully.[16] The store manager told reporters that customers in the store parking lot were killed when the limo sped down the hill "probably over 60 mph [97 km/h]".[17] Later it emerged that two pedestrians in the parking lot were killed after being struck by the Highlander, which was driven into a drainage ditch 50 feet (15 m) away.[15] All 18 people in the limousine were killed.[18] All but one were pronounced dead at the scene; that survivor died after being airlifted to an Albany hospital.[17]
An eyewitness claimed the crash sounded like an explosion, and when she exited her parked car, she saw a body on the ground, and then registered the screaming from bystanders.[19] Another eyewitness told reporters she saw "...this large van, a very unusual looking vehicle out here in Schoharie in the bushes and really wrecked, hit a tree", and she watched first responders who broke windows to get victims out.[20]

Victims[edit]

The dead were all adults, aged 24 to 70. Eight of the passengers were married couples. Four passengers were sisters, two were brothers.[21] Autopsies later found the cause of death for all to be multiple severe traumatic blunt force injuries.[22]
Passengers
  • Savannah Bursese, 24
  • Rachael Cavosie, 30
  • Matthew Coons, 27
  • Patrick Cushing, 31
  • Mary Dyson, 33
  • Robert Dyson, 34
  • Amanda Halse, 26
  • Abigail Jackson, 34
  • Adam Jackson, 34
  • Allison King, 31
  • Erin McGowan, 34
  • Shane McGowan, 30
  • Amanda Rivenburg, 29
  • Amy Steenburg, 29
  • Axel Steenburg, 29
  • Richard Steenburg, 34
  • Michael Ukaj, 34
Driver
  • Scott Lisinicchia, 53
Pedestrians
  • Brian Hough, 46
  • James Schnurr, 70

Investigations[edit]

Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) were at the scene of the crash.[23] A state trooper told reporters that they had deployed a reconstruction unit, facial identification and a drone in order to gather data about the crash and the victims.[18]
NTSB head Robert Sumwalt told reporters two days after the crash that it was too early to say whether the limo had been speeding at the time; the agency was focusing on human and mechanical factors as causes. It was, however, a "high-energy impact" that had severely damaged the front and left portions of the vehicle, and, Sumwalt intimated, driven the engine into the passenger compartment. There were no skid marks on the pavement, suggesting the driver had not applied the brakes, or that they had not been functioning well, before reaching the stop sign. Investigators would be looking at the airbag control module for data that might answer their questions.[11]
Robert Patnaude, commander of State Police Troop G, which patrols the Capital District, said on October 9 that his agency was treating the case as a criminal investigation due to the level of negligence possibly involved. "We'll determine if there's any criminal culpability on the part of anyone," he told the media. "If there is, we'll hold them accountable."[24]
The state police's investigation led to some tension with the NTSB team. Since the former investigation is a criminal case, it takes priority, and the limousine remains in NYSP custody until it is finished. Almost two weeks after the crash, the federal investigators complained privately to the Associated Press that they had not been able to even look over the vehicle.[25]
The day after the article was published, Senator Charles Schumer told the media that an NTSB investigator had been "granted limited access" to the limousine. The state police issued a statement confirming that, and also noted that it was not the first time their federal counterparts had been able to view the Excursion. However, they were not yet permitted to examine it as they wanted to until the criminal investigation had concluded, and the defense attorney for arrested suspect Nauman Hussain and any investigators he had hired had had a chance to do so as well, an issue the NYSP said the NTSB was fully aware of.[26]
The state police promised the NTSB its investigators would get their chance to more fully examine the limo in the following weeks. Schumer said that the NTSB would likely release a report on the crash in three months;[26] a board spokesman clarified that that report would likely be preliminary. The investigation, and the full final report, could possibly take a year or two.[22]
On October 22, the state police announced that it would soon be allowing Hussain's defense attorney, Lee Kindlon, and defense experts, to look at the limousine, along with the prosecution. NTSB investigators, said state police spokesman Beau Duffy, had been able to look at the vehicle's exterior but not yet examine its internal mechanics.[27]
The Albany Times-Union also investigated two DMV inspection stations that had passed the Excursion in the two years before the crash, despite lacking the legal authority to do so. It could not confirm whether those businesses had been investigated by the state.[28]

State police[edit]

The state police concentrated their investigation on factors specific to the accident: the vehicle, its driver and Prestige Limousine.[24] Within a week of the crash, they had enough evidence to make an arrest.

Vehicle[edit]


2000–2004 Ford Excursion stretch limousine, similar in configuration to accident vehicle
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said at an October 8 news conference that Scott Lisinicchia, the driver of the limo, did not have a Commercial Driver's License with a passenger endorsement required to operate the vehicle. Cuomo added that the limo was a "chopped vehicle", cut and extended, needing a federal certificate to operate, which the limo involved in the crash did not have. It had also failed inspection the previous month due to not only the absence of this certificate, but mechanical issues like a hydraulic antilock brake warning indicator light that stayed on, a dangling brake line that could have made contact with a tire, defective emergency exits[29] and defective windshield wipers, making it illegal to operate on public roads in the state until those issues were corrected.
The inspection further noted that similar issues had been found in a March spot inspection;[24] the September inspection report notes that the Excursion had been driven 1,300 miles (2,100 km) since then.[30] In the previous inspection the vehicle was also cited as having 18 seats installed, in excess of its designed passenger capacity of 10.[24][29] Prestige Limousines, the owner and operator, was told to cease and desist from limousine operations until further notice.[31] It was later reported that different license plates had been affixed to the limousine at its March and September inspections; however, the vehicle identification number had not changed.[32]
During the first six months of 2018, Global Liberty, Prestige's insurance company had canceled coverage on the Excursion six times. Any time that happens, DMV automatically revokes the vehicle's registration, restoring it only when the owner can get the coverage restored or find new coverage; otherwise the license plates must be surrendered. The limousine's registration had, in fact, been restored for the sixth time the day before the crash. Why Global Liberty had canceled the coverage, which usually costs $5–10,000 annually, was not known; the company would not comment.[33]
In December, WNYT spoke with the owner of an Albany limousine company that had sold Prestige the Excursion in 2016. He said they had owned it for 15 years prior to the sale; it had been in good working order at that time and had passed its last inspection. He was cooperating with both the state police and the NTSB.[34]
Two days before the crash, the limousine had been listed for sale on Craigslist. The asking price was $9,000; the seller claimed it was "DOT ready" and was in "excellent condition" with 180,000 miles (290,000 km) on it. The seller did not identify themselves but the phone number given as a contact was one that Prestige had used.[35]
The aunt of victim Erin McGowan told the media that shortly before the crash her niece had texted her with concerns about the vehicle's condition. The limo had been a last-second replacement for a bus originally rented that broke down,[7] and its engine was apparently unusually loud. "When we get to the brewery we will all b deaf", McGowan wrote,[11] with several Face with Tears of Joy emojis appended, at 1:37 p.m. Three minutes later, Allison King texted her fiancé that the brakes were burning and the vehicle was coasting.[7]
In a Times-Union story, other limousine company operators around the state questioned how Prestige was able to continue operations with all the violations it had accumulated and the lack of proper permits; in their experience the state was diligent in enforcing its regulations. One owner said it was his understanding that if more than 20% of an operator's vehicles have been declared unserviceable, the state can force it to cease operations, an order only a court can override. Records kept by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, which also has authority over limousine operators, showed that Prestige had 80% of its vehicles unserviceable at the time of the accident.[36]

Driver[edit]

A couple who had rented the same vehicle, also driven by Lisinicchia, for their wedding a year earlier told Albany station WNYT that the limo was in poor condition then. Its exterior was flecked with rust, some of which was covered by duct tape. They, too, found its engine loud.[10]
The couple also recalled that Lisinicchia had been erratic and made dangerous moves such as backing up to make a turn he had missed while on a busy road. They had noticed empty beer cans in the rear as well, and said he had an unidentified passenger in the front seat all day. When they asked him about these things he responded belligerently and profanely. The couple's complaints to management of what was then doing business as Saratoga Luxury Limousine were initially dismissed and only resulted in a partial refund.[10]
A driver who had worked for a different limousine company that used the same property as Prestige and sometimes shared its fleet told WTEN that he had driven the Excursion in 2015 and it was "absolutely unsafe". In particular, the brakes barely worked. "I was terrified", he said. "You just couldn't stop. You really had to put your foot on the brake." When the vehicle had begun smoking during a prom, the children's parents refused to let them ride in it. Neither Prestige nor his employer, the driver said, did anything more than minimal maintenance work. After leaving the company he reported the vehicle to the state.[37]
Lisinicchia's family said he had been given an unsafe vehicle to drive and would never have knowingly put passengers in harm's way.[38] His wife said he had been driving for Prestige part-time for a year. She recalled overhearing him on the phone, when the company called with an assignment, complaining that he would not drive a particular vehicle and requesting another one.[39]

Company[edit]

Further investigation led to disclosures that other Prestige vehicles had failed inspections in the past. The company's address was a hotel in Gansevoort, north of Albany, and its owner, Shahed Hussain was provisionally identified by The New York Times as a former Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) informant in the Newburgh Four terrorism case who had previously avoided prosecution for his alleged involvement in a scheme to sell false identification while he was employed at the state's Department of Motor Vehicles. Police were unable to interview him after the accident as he had returned to his native Pakistan,[29] reportedly for health reasons.[11]
Hussain's son Nauman spoke with the police in his father's stead. His attorney, Lee Kindlon, suggested the crash was due to Lisinicchia's unfamiliarity with the intersection. "You just can't stop at something like that," he said. "I think the state Department of Transportation [DOT] is just looking to point a finger."[24]
Authorities had also found issues with the Hussains' maintenance of the Gansevoort hotel Prestige used as its business address. Neighbors had frequently complained about the condition of the property; in early 2017 the state Department of Health shut it down and temporarily evicted the generally low-income long-term residents after a sewer line failed. The Hussains attributed it to sabotage by a tenant they had evicted; an inspection found, however, that it had been poorly installed, with improper fittings and no support.[38]

NTSB[edit]

While the NTSB is also interested in what the state police learn about the Excursion, Lisinicchia and Prestige, they will also be looking into some larger issues raised by the crash that could have contributed to not only it but other accidents: the state of limousine regulation generally, and the design of the intersection.[40]

Limousine safety regulation[edit]

"This didn’t have to happen", Helaine Olen wrote in a Washington Post column after the crash. "There are massive loopholes in the federal safety regulations governing limousines—loopholes so large you can, well, drive a jumbo stretch limousine through them." Primarily, she wrote, vehicles that have to meet strict safety standards when manufactured do not have to be re-examined after being expanded. Efforts to change this at the federal and state level have generally failed in the face of vigorous opposition from the industries involved.[41]
Raul Arbalaez, an engineer with the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, agreed. "They don't have to go back and prove that they meet any of the crash safety criteria", he said of vehicle expanders and the limousine operators. The Excursion that crashed in Schoharie, he speculated, likely weighed at least 10,000 pounds (4.5 t), even without accounting for its passengers. "That is a lot to ask of the same four tires and brakes that vehicle came with."[42]
After it was reported that the limousine in the crash had been cited several times for insufficient braking capacity, defined as having less than 80% of the brakes' designed capacity, Frank Figueroa, a California vehicle constructor who had not worked on the Excursion told NBC News that that failure might have resulted from constricted brake lines. While the original brake lines to the front wheels are retained when a vehicle is expanded into a limousine, he said, it is necessary to extend those that reach the rear wheels. For that reason, the extended lines are usually made of steel to avoid any risk of obstruction or constriction.[43]
Vehicles such as the Excursion used by Prestige are associated in the industry with "third-tier guys" based in smaller cities, Figueroa said. Nonetheless, he maintained, as manufactured it had an 11,000-pound (5.0 t) towing capacity. If its original braking system were in place, it should have been able to come to a complete stop at the intersection.[43]
Another issue relevant to the accident was seat belt requirements, or the lack thereof, for passengers in limousines. New York, like many states, only requires passengers in the front seat to use them. Expanders are not even required to add them, nor any additional side airbags.[41] "[W]earing seat belts does save lives", Sumwalt told the media. "Whether or not it would've made a difference here or not, that remains to be seen." Peter Goelz, a former NTSB managing director, said the crash would be "a watershed event for the limousine industry", as he predicted that the lack of or failure to use seat belts would be cited as a major cause for the loss of life in the accident and rules would be changed to require them.[40]
Federal and state responses[edit]
After a 2015 limousine crash on Long Island that killed four, Schumer, the Senate's current minority leader, had asked the NTSB to study limousine accidents as the beginning of an effort to improve safety and regulation.[41] He and Kirsten Gillibrand, New York's other U.S. Senator, along with Connecticut senator Richard Blumenthal, again wrote to the board after the accident, saying it pointed to the need to improve regulation and safety standards for limousines and the companies that operate them. New York state legislators also have introduced bills to improve limousine safety.[44]
State senator Simcha Felder's bill would ban the use of any stretch limousines older than 10 years and require a minimum of $2 million in liability insurance coverage, as well as changing procedures for vehicles that fail inspection.[45] AssemblywomanAmy Paulin, who has made limousine safety a cause since 2006, introduced several bills in her chamber to implement recommendations made by a grand jury that investigated the 2015 crash, including requiring seat belt use.[46]
A lobbyist for the industry told the Times-Union that many of these bills seemed premature since the cause of the accident was not yet known and the state's regulations for limos were already among the strictest in the U.S.[46] Nonetheless, the state has already made some administrative responses, changing responsibility for inspecting limos to the DMV from the DOT and reclassifying any vehicle designed to carry more than nine passengers in addition to the driver as a bus.[45]

Configuration of intersection[edit]

The family that owns the Apple Barrel Country Store, told reporters that the intersection and hill are a recurring issue.[47]Sumwalt confirmed to the media that his agency will be looking at the configuration of the junction as a possible contributing factor. "We do know that there have been other crashes at this intersection," he said. "[S]o we want to see: Were there factors in the roadway itself that could have led to the conditions of this crash?"[40]
The intersection was originally configured as a Y, slightly uphill of its present location, which was more developed in the early 20th century[48] and today's Route 30A was part of NY 43.[49] After World War IIRoute 30, which had followed the course northeast that 30A does today, was realigned to its present course and the intersection reconfigured into a Y with Route 43 following a new road, parallel to a former rail corridor, that forked off south of the original intersection; the portion that had led west from the intersection to the realignment was vacated.[50] In 1960 Route 43 was truncated to end at its junction with Route 30 in Schoharie; the portion north of the Route 30 intersection was made part of Route 30A, newly created at the behest of the Fulton County Automobile Club.[51]
Two roads meeting at a very oblique angle with a large stop sign at the junction. Signs at the right indicate that traffic going straight ahead is following Route 30 southbound, with a right turn indicated for Route 30A northbound. Between the two signs a white-on-green sign says that it is three miles to Schoharie straight ahead and two miles to Central Bridge on the left. Beyond the intersection are some trees, trailer homes and parked cars
View of the junction from southbound Route 30 in 2008, just before reconfiguration and south of the later accident site
This configuration of the intersection necessitated that traffic on southbound 30 not only stop at the bottom of the hill but turn left just before doing so. After Interstate 88was built through the area in the early 1980s, with an exit on Route 30A a mile north of the intersection serving both roads. Route 30 was likewise realigned to clear a corridor for the interstate. Its brief concurrency with NY 7 two miles (3.2 km) northeast of the 30A junction was replaced with a four-way intersection, and a new, curved section along the hillside replaced the previous straight descent to the intersection.[52]With the interstate access trucks began using that section of Route 30 more, sometimes having accidents at the bottom of the hill when their brakes failed.[53][54]
Residents in the intersection's vicinity, and Schoharie's town board, asked the state to do something about it. After a fatal accident in 2008,[47] the state DOT began a multiyear project to reconfigure the intersection a third time, straightening Route 30 to make a T intersection with 30A. When it was completed, vehicles over 18 short tons (16 t) were banned from the section of the highway between routes 7 and 30A; those traveling south on Route 30 must follow Route 7 down to Route 30A just north of the I-88 exit. The weight limit was eventually lowered to 5 short tons (4.5 t) and, by the end of 2015, all trucks. Schoharie's town supervisor believes the changes have been beneficial, but the family that owns the Apple Barrel says accidents still occur.[53]

Inspection stations[edit]

On October 15, the Times-Union reported that the limousine had received a valid inspection sticker from a state Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) inspection station, which it should not have.[36] Vehicles designed to carry more than 10 passengers had, since 2011, been subject to inspection by the DOT, and privately-operated repair shops licensed to do inspections are legally required to refuse them to such vehicles unless they have a waiver allowing them to do so.[28] The limousine also had livery license plates, which again it could not have legally borne due to its high passenger capacity.[36]
In late November the Times-Union followed up on the story. Both the truck stop in Wilton that had issued the Excursion its first sticker in July 2016, and the Mavis Discount Tire in Saratoga Springs that had issued the second one in May 2018, 10 months after the first one had lapsed, were still offering inspections. Neither business would comment to the newspaper. The DMV likewise refused to say whether it had taken any action, citing the ongoing criminal investigation into the crash.[28]

Arrest of Nauman Hussain[edit]

On October 10, state police arrested Nauman Hussain, the operator of the limousine company and son of the owner, in Watervliet and charged him with criminally negligent homicide,[5] a Class E felony, the least serious under the New York Penal Law.[55] He was taken to Schoharie County Court in Cobleskill and arraigned, after which he pleaded not guilty to the charge, posted $150,000 bond and was released. District Attorney Susan Mallery asked for higher bail than usual to be set for a nonviolent felony, and for the court to require that Hussain surrender any passports he might have, due to the perception of a flight risk. Upon his arrest, she told the court, his vehicle was packed with his personal belongings,[5] including several suitcases.[32]
Kindlon said his client had no passports to surrender (although it was later reported that he had surrendered his U.S. passport[56]), and was not even a citizen of Pakistan. Hussain had not been fleeing, he said, but moving in response to death threats he had received;[5] investigators did not find that claim credible.[32] Kindlon said he, too, had received threats, and as a result, there was a greater police presence in the courtroom.[5]
If convicted, Hussain faces from 15 months to four years in prison. Kindlon added, however, that he had been advised the state could press 20 counts of the charge, one for each victim, and ask for the terms to be served consecutively, which would result in a 26​13–80-year sentence. He complained that the state had "jumped the gun", since Mallery had told him the day before that charges might not be filed for months, due to the seriousness of the accident.[5]
Kindlon conceded the limo had minor safety issues which the state told Prestige to fix, but said it did not reach the criminal level. He claimed that DOT had evidence that the brakes had been repaired in June. When asked why the state would not have a record of this repair, he told reporters, "That's a great question for DOT".[5]
A DOT spokesman had previously stated that in the wake of failing the September inspection, a large sticker indicating the vehicle was "unserviceable" was placed on the windshield;[38] the sticker also has language warning that anyone other than an inspector who removes it can be fined for doing so.[36] Even if all the violations had been corrected, the company would have been required to have the vehicle reinspected in its entirety. He called Kindlon's claim that they were fixed "categorically false".[38]
The arrest was not Hussain's first. After a 2014 traffic stop in Cohoes, police said he and his brother Shahyer, who was driving, attempted to pass themselves off as the other. Police eventually learned their true identities. Shahyer's license had been revoked after several dozen suspensions; Nauman's license had been suspended several times but was valid at the time. Nauman was charged with false personation and conspiracy, both misdemeanors; the disposition of the charges is not known.[57]
It was reported that a Bentley Continental GT owned by Shahyer had been destroyed in a suspicious 2013 fire. Suspicions first arose at a Queensbury garage after the mechanic repairing it found that damage to the transmission appeared to have been deliberately inflicted and was thus not covered by the warranty. However, no charges were ever filed.[56]
On October 23, prosecutors began presenting evidence against Hussain to a Schoharie County grand jury, which will decide if there is enough evidence to formally indict him.[58]

Aftermath[edit]

Governor Cuomo released a statement which expressed his heartbreak for the victims, commended first responders for helping through the night, and noted the state police were working with federal and local authorities to investigate the crash.[59] Schumer asked God's blessing through Twitter for the victims' families and first responders.[60]
The Apple Barrel Country Store began to collect donations for local first responders, a mostly volunteer organization, and planned a vigil to honor the victims at the store on October 9.[61] The family that owns it said it was establishing a non-profit organization to build a permanent memorial at the crash site next to the store. They hoped it could be completed by the first anniversary of the crash.[62]
Thousands attended an Amsterdam candlelight vigil for the victims along the banks of the Mohawk River on the evening of October 8; many residents of the city knew at least one of the dead.[8] Since three of the dead had been state employees, Cuomo ordered all state government agencies to fly the flags outside their buildings at half-staff on October 11.[63]
Funeral services for eight victims—the four sisters, their three husbands and one husband's brother—were held at St. Stanislaus Roman Catholic Church in the city a week after the crash. Hundreds paid respects at the wake the day before, including Albany-area U.S. Representative Paul Tonko and state Assemblyman Angelo Santabarbara, whose district includes Amsterdam.[64][65]
One victim, Adam Jackson, had been a Republican deputy commissioner of elections for Montgomery County. His death had distracted his coworkers so much that the absentee ballots they sent out for the November elections accidentally omitted a line for Republican congressional candidate Joe Vitollo. When the mistake was discovered, new ballots were mailed to 89 voters in the town of Amsterdam who had received the incorrect ones.[66]
In late November, the parents of Amanda Rivenburg, one of the limousine passengers, filed the first civil lawsuit related to the accident. Their action, brought in Supreme Court for Albany County, named Shahed and Nauman Hussein as defendants, making many of the same allegations of negligence that state investigators had already publicized. Their suit did not specify any amount of monetary damages they were seeking, as their attorney indicated they were just trying to find out what had happened. He also said they would be suing governmental entities such as state agencies in a separate action in the state's Court of Claims.[67]
If they did, those lawsuits might have less chance of succeeding, due to the outcome of similar actions against the state brought by the families of victims of the 2005 Ethan Allen accident, where a small tour boat on Lake George capsized in the wake of a bigger one, killing 20. The NTSB had later faulted state regulators for not reducing the boat's passenger capacity; however the state's highest court, the Court of Appeals, had dismissed the suit, holding that the facts of the case did not create an exception to the state's sovereign immunity, a legal doctrine under which governments it applies to can be sued only if they allow themselves to be. A lawyer who had represented some of those victims, and had been retained by two of the families of limousine crash victims, told the Times Union that the state's more direct role in regulating Prestige might result in a different verdict.[30]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Three of the original invitees had chosen not to attend.[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Police: 20 dead in upstate NY crash involving limousine". Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. October 7, 2018. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  2. ^ "Limo crash leaves 20 dead in New York state". BBC News. October 7, 2018. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  3. ^ "20 killed in horrific limousine crash in upstate New York". CBS News. October 7, 2018. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  4. ^ Gill, Julian (October 8, 2018). "Deadly NY limo crash stark reminder of bus fire that killed 23 from Bellaire". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  5. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g Gavin, Robert; Hughes, Steve (October 10, 2018). "Limo owner's son released on bail after arraignment on homicide charge". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  6. ^ Jump up to:a b Moench, Mallory (October 25, 2018). "'God made a mistake': Family remembers brothers lost in Schoharie limo crash". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  7. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l McKinley, Jesse; Ferré-Sadurní, Luis; Berner, Kristi (October 13, 2018). "Death at the Crossroads: A Ragged Limo, an Anxious Driver and 17 Friends". The New York Times. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  8. ^ Jump up to:a b "N.Y. Town Overcome By Grief, Holds Vigil After Deadly Limo Crash". CBS News. October 8, 2018. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
  9. ^ New York State Commercial Drivers Manual
  10. ^ Jump up to:a b c "Couple: 2017 wedding with limo company from Schoharie crash was 'nightmare'". WNYT. Albany, New York. October 9, 2018. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  11. ^ Jump up to:a b c d McKinley, Jesse; Ferré-Sadurní, Luis; McGeehan, Patrick (October 8, 2018). "Owner in Limo Crash Had Shoddy Record and Shady Dealings". The New York Times. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  12. ^ ACME Mapper (Map). Cartography by United States Geological Survey. ACME Laboratories. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  13. ^ ACME Mapper (Map). Cartography by United States Geological Survey. ACME Laboratories. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  14. ^ Goodwin, Mike; Stanforth, Lauren & Hughes, Steve (October 7, 2018). "20 killed in Schoharie limousine crash". Times Union. Albany, NY. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  15. ^ Jump up to:a b Goodwin, Mike; Stanforth, Lauren & Hughes, Steve (October 7, 2018). "Schoharie limo crash deadliest in US in nine years". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved October 7,2018.
  16. ^ WNYT Staff (October 7, 2018). "NTSB: Schoharie crash deadliest in US since 2009". WNYT NewsChannel 13. Albany, NY: WNYT-TV. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  17. ^ Jump up to:a b McKinley, Jesse; Goldmacher, Shane & Ferré-Sadurní, Luis (October 7, 2018). "Limo Crash Leaves 20 Dead at Popular Tourist Spot in Upstate New York". The New York Times. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  18. ^ Jump up to:a b WTEN Staff (October 7, 2018). "Breaking: 20 killed in wedding limo crash". Mobile, Alabama: WKRG-TV. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  19. ^ "Police: 20 dead in upstate NY crash involving limo". East Bay Times. Walnut Creek, CA. Associated Press. October 7, 2018. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  20. ^ Davidson, Tom (October 7, 2018). "New York limousine crash kills 20 after 'driver failed to stop at junction'". The Daily Mirror. United Kingdom. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  21. ^ Moench, Mallory; Masters, Emily (October 9, 2018). "Limo crash victims". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 10,2018.
  22. ^ Jump up to:a b Anderson, Eric (October 19, 2018). "NTSB gets access to limousine wrecked in Schoharie". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  23. ^ "20 killed in Schoharie limousine crash". MSN. October 7, 2018. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  24. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e Gavin, Robert; Rulison, Larry; Lyons, Brendan J. (October 9, 2018). "Police explore whether negligence a factor in fatal Schoharie crash". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  25. ^ Balsamo, Michael; Klepper, David (October 18, 2018). "NTSB hasn't fully examined limo in NY crash that killed 20". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  26. ^ Jump up to:a b "Autopsy results released for Schoharie victims; NTSB gets look at limo". WNYT. October 19, 2018. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  27. ^ Cook, Stephen (October 22, 2018). "Defense experts to view Schoharie crash limo soon". The Daily Gazette. Schenectady, New York. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  28. ^ Jump up to:a b c Rulison, Larry (November 29, 2018). "Shops that issued DMV stickers to stretch limo still doing inspections". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved December 4, 2018.
  29. ^ Jump up to:a b c McKinly, Jesse; Rashbaum, William (October 10, 2018). "Limo Firm's Operator Is Charged in Fatal Upstate New York Crash". The New York Times. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  30. ^ Jump up to:a b Silberstein, Rachel (November 24, 2018). "High court Ethan Allen ruling poses legal roadblock for limo victims". Albany Times Union. Retrieved November 28, 2018.
  31. ^ Rosenblatt, Kalhan (October 8, 2018). "Limo involved in fatal crash never should have been on the road, New York governor says". NBC News. Retrieved October 8, 2018.
  32. ^ Jump up to:a b c ABC News (October 11, 2018). "Report: Limo in fatal Schoharie crash used two different license plates for inspection". WTEN. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  33. ^ Rulison, Larry (November 30, 2018). "Limo company's insurance repeatedly canceled before crash". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved December 4, 2018.
  34. ^ "Limo company involved in Schoharie crash failed to follow inspection rules". WNYT. November 29, 2018. Retrieved December 4, 2018.
  35. ^ Hughes, Steve (October 9, 2018). "Prestige Limo tried to sell vehicle days before fatal crash". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 11, 2018.
  36. ^ Jump up to:a b c d Rulison, Larry; Stanforth, Lauren (October 15, 2018). "How was fatal limo allowed to stay on the road?". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 17, 2018.
  37. ^ Tucker, Anya (October 11, 2018). "Safety concerns over limo raised three years ago". WTEN. Retrieved October 12,2018.
  38. ^ Jump up to:a b c d Hill, Michael (October 9, 2018). "Limo driver's family believes he was given an unsafe vehicle". Associated Press. Saratoga Springs, New York. Retrieved October 11,2018 – via The Saratogian.
  39. ^ "Limo driver's wife says husband had complained about company's cars". CBS News. October 10, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2018.
  40. ^ Jump up to:a b c McLaughlin, Elliott C. (October 9, 2018). "What the NTSB will investigate in the upstate New York limo crash that killed 20 people". CNN. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  41. ^ Jump up to:a b c Olen, Helaine (October 8, 2018). "The deadly limousine crash didn't have to turn out the way it did". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  42. ^ Silva, Daniella (October 8, 2018). "Crash that killed 20 highlights safety problems with stretch limousines". NBC News. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  43. ^ Jump up to:a b Winter, Tim; Romero, Tom (October 9, 2018). "Limousine in deadly New York crash that killed 20 was cited for 'brakes out of service'". NBC News. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  44. ^ Hughes, Steve (October 21, 2018). "Federal limo regulation bid echoes 2015 appeal after Long Island crash". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  45. ^ Jump up to:a b "Senate introduces regulations for stretch limousines". Albany Times-Union. October 13, 2018. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  46. ^ Jump up to:a b Hughes, Steve (October 22, 2018). "Grand jury recommendations ignored after fatal Long Island limo crash". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 23, 2018.
  47. ^ Jump up to:a b "Scene of horrific limousine crash a longtime known danger, Schoharie, N.Y. resident says". CBS News. October 8, 2018. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  48. ^ Schoharie Quadrangle — New York — Schenectady, Schoharie Cos (Map). 1:24,000. USGS 7​1⁄2-minute topographic quadrangle maps. Cartography by United States Geological Survey. HistoricAerials.com. 1900–1944. Retrieved October 24, 2018.
  49. ^ Binghamton (Map). 1:250,000. USGS 1:250,000 topographic maps. Cartography by United States Geological Survey. University of Texas. 1948. NK 18-5. Retrieved October 24, 2018.
  50. ^ Schoharie Quadrangle — New York — Schenectady, Schoharie Cos (Map). 1:24,000. USGS 7​1⁄2-minute topographic quadrangle maps. Cartography by United States Geological Survey. HistoricAerials.com. 1946. Retrieved October 24, 2018.
  51. ^ "State Will Change Route 148 Number to 30-A, Auto Club Informed; Younglove Helped". The Leader-Herald. Gloversville, New York. April 12, 1960. p. 11. Retrieved January 15, 2017.
  52. ^ Schoharie Quadrangle — New York — Schenectady, Schoharie Cos (Map). 1:24,000. USGS 7​1⁄2-minute topographic quadrangle maps. Cartography by United States Geological Survey. HistoricAerials.com. 1980–94. Retrieved October 24, 2018.
  53. ^ Jump up to:a b Arnold, Chad; Zambito, Thomas (October 9, 2018). "Safety of intersection called into question following deadly limousine crash". Democrat and Chronicle. Rochester, New York. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  54. ^ Cook, Stephen (October 7, 2018). "Resident: Schoharie limo crash intersection dangerous". The Daily Gazette. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  55. ^ "New York Consolidated Laws, Penal Law - PEN § 125.10 Criminally negligent homicide". FindLaw. 2018. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  56. ^ Jump up to:a b Hughes, Steve; Lyons, Brendan J. (October 12, 2018). "Fires trail Hussain family". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 14, 2018.
  57. ^ Staff (February 8, 2014). "Cops: Brothers impersonated each other in Cohoes". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 11, 2018.
  58. ^ "Case against Schoharie limo operator going to grand jury". WTEN. October 23, 2018. Retrieved October 23,2018.
  59. ^ Klepper, David (October 7, 2018). "Witness: NY crash that left 20 dead was 'like an explosion'". WNYT NewsChannel 13. Albany, NY: WNYT-TV. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  60. ^ Silva, Daniella; Rosenblatt, Kalhan & Stelloh, Tim (October 7, 2018). "20 people killed in limousine crash in New York state, police say". NBC News. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  61. ^ Burkhard, Emily (October 7, 2018). "Locals react to Schoharie crash that left 20 dead". WNYT NewsChannel 13. Albany, NY: WNYT-TV. Retrieved October 7, 2018.
  62. ^ Ferrone, Ayla (October 12, 2018). "Permanent memorial in the works for Schoharie limo crash victims". WTEN. Retrieved October 13, 2018.
  63. ^ Lyons, Brendan J. (October 9, 2018). "Cuomo orders flags to half-staff in honor of limo-crash victims". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  64. ^ Cline, Sara (October 12, 2018). "Silent respect in Amsterdam for 8 limo crash victims". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  65. ^ Winsor, Morgan (October 14, 2018). "4 sisters, 4 family members killed in deadly limo crash laid to rest". ABC News. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  66. ^ Silberstein, Rachel (October 18, 2018). "Hard-hit by limo tragedy, Montgomery County BOE apologizes for ballot error". Albany Times-Union. Retrieved October 22, 2018.
  67. ^ Rulison, Larry; Gavin, Robert (November 19, 2018). "First lawsuit filed on behalf of limo crash victim". Albany Times Union. Retrieved November 20, 2018.
*Sources
Deadly N.Y. limo crash: Limo company owner was FBI informant - CBS ...
https://www.cbsnews.com/.../shahed-hussain-prestige-limousine-schoharie-new-york-c...
2 days ago - NEW YORK -- The owner of a limousine company in the crash that ... In 2009, the government credited Hussain with rooting out radical Muslims in an ... of the defendants picking targets for jihad and ranting against Jews.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/08/nyregion/prestige-limousine-crash-schoharie.html
, did business out of a low-budget hotel and whose owner may have a curious history with federal law enforcement. On Monday, officials moved to suspend the company’s operations and seize its vehicles.

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo told reporters that the limousine involved in the accident had failed an inspection last month and “was not supposed to be on the road.”

owner of the limousine company, Shahed Hussain, has the same name and address as that of a former informant for the F.B.I. who has testified in two prominent terrorism cases, according to public records. 

lacked commercial drivers license

e motor is making everyone deaf,” wrote Ms. McGowan, 

 manager at the hotel, identified the owner as “Malik” and said he lived in Dubai. Mr. Hussain, the informant, went by Malik when he helped the F.B.I. infiltrate a mosque in Albany.

posed as a wealthy Muslim radical and was the central prosecution witness in a 2004 federal sting focusing on a pizzeria owner and an imam at an Albany mosque. Six years later, Mr. Hussain, who posed as a terrorist, played a key role in the government’s case in a plot to blow up two synagogues in the Bronx.

He became an F.B.I. informant after being charged in 2002 with a scheme that involved taking money to illegally help people in the Albany area get driver’s licenses.

https://www.rferl.org/a/owner-of-limo-company-in...crash-is.../29533620.html
The owner of a company whose limousine was involved in a crash that ... The government credited Hussain with rooting out radical Muslims in a ... tapes of the defendants picking targets forjihad and ranting against Jews.".

NY: Owner of limo company involved in lethal crash is Muslim ex-FBI ...  https://www.jihadwatch.org/.../ny-owner-of-limo-company-involved-in-lethal-crash-is...
   NY: Owner of limo company involved in lethal crash is Muslim ... the U.S., and became an FBI informant, stopping one jihad mass murder plot, ...

FBI Islamic terror asset owned the broken-down limo in DEADLY CAR ...  https://gellerreport.com/2018/10/limo-terror-deadly-20.html/
   FBI Islamic terror asset owned the broken-down limo in DEADLY CAR CRASH ... The owner of the limousine that crashed in Schoharie, killing 20 ....May 2009, Hussain again surfaced as an FBI informant when four men from Newburgh were charged with conspiring to plant explosives outside the Riverdale Jewish Center and Riverdale Temple in New York City. As in the Albany case, Hussain posed as a wealthy businessman and befriended the men before implicating them in a terror plot.

The four Newburgh men, Laguerre Payen, James Cromitie, Onta Williams, and David Williams, were convicted but the FBI’s use of Hussain drew harsh criticism and raised entrapment questions.

 five inspections were done of the company’s vehicles over the past 25 months, and 4 were taken out of service as a result, which is a rate of 80 percent failure. The national average is 20 percent.

e Limousine shares a business address with the Crest Inn Suites & Cottages in Wilton, a motel that is also owned by Hussain.

Hussain lived at the motel but on Monday morning, the manager of the motel, Arnie Cornett, said Hussain moved about 18 months ago. He still owns the motel and continues to operate the limo company.

It crashed into an unoccupied parked car and hit two pedestrians before coming to a rest in a shallow ravine, officials said. The limo driver, all 17 passengers and the two pedestrians died.

How does running a stop sign precipitate ramming a PARKED CAR and pedestrians ? (she is implying attack but if it was out of control and could not stop they were in the way) 

numerous islmophobic comments: Was this deliberate? Rather than driving into a crowd of people, he had a vehicle full of people who couldn't get away.

msm are trying to cover up this case by claiming it was the limo's fault.:

"Crash that killed 20 raises concerns over "Frankenstein laws" for limos"
CBSNews
Saturday's deadly crash in Schoharie, New York in which a limo driver, 17 passengers and two pedestrians were killed is raising new safety concerns for the limousine industry. It's believed to be the deadliest transportation accident of any kind in the U.S. since 2009.
But there has been a deadly limo accident every year in this country since at least 2000. Those crashes are blamed for at least 68 deaths.
A limousine filled with people can be its own inherent danger. People are celebrating and often not wearing seatbelts, which can result in passengers being thrown around in the event of a crash.


Limo Company Owner in Crash Revealed as F.B.I. Informant, Recruiter of Terrorists, Fraudster
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/09/nyregion/limo-owner-fbi-informant-shahed-hussain.html?module=Uisil
Mr. Hussain arrived in the United States in about 1995 with considerable legal and extralegal adventures already behind him.

He testified in the 2009 terrorism trial that in Pakistan, he had been active in an opposition political party, arrested and tortured and charged with murder in the 1990s, freed after his father bribed the police, had fled to Moscow, Mexico and finally Texas on a fake passport and was granted asylum in Albany.

While working in and later owning gas stations, he developed a sideline helping people get driver’s licenses. He worked for a company that provided interpreters for people taking driver’s license tests at the D.M.V. and would give his customers the correct answers while ostensibly translating the questions to them.

shows a man who has spent the better part of two decades crossing back and forth from one side of the law to the other.

His work helped convict two leaders of an Albany mosque in a 2004 plot to import a missile and assassinate a Pakistani diplomat, and four other men in a 2009 conspiracy to bomb synagogues in the Bronx. In both cases, the attacks never took place because they were part of a sting operation.

In one of those terrorism trials, Mr. Hussain described five years of solid work for the F.B.I.


 men discussed religion, politics and jihad. Over time, Mr. Hussain, acting on orders from the F.B.I., convinced the pizzeria owner and another man that he was helping plan an attack on a Pakistani diplomat in New York and would be importing a surface-to-air missile from China for the purpose.

They joined the plot, were arrested and, ultimately, convicted, despite their lawyers’ complaints that Mr. Hussain entrapped them.

Also in 2003, Mr. Hussain filed for bankruptcy, claiming debts of $177,000.

If the limousine company allowed a non-CDL chauffeur to operate a stretch limo, we can infer from that they are willing to commit other corner-cutting measures a responsible transport company would never do

ma6h ago
So the guy who is an undercover snitch go the FBI is responsible for the death of 20 people because is a life long criminal. ripping off the system whenever and wherever he can. This is where the FBI goes off the rails and just doesn't use good judgment


Albany NY My jaw hit the floor when I found out the driver was the informant in the Newburgh 4 case. I highly recommend the documentary "The Newburgh Sting". Not only is he one of the shadiest characters you will ever see, but the whole event was a total miscarriage of justice and the perfect definition of entrapment. Eye opening, and just bizarre the connection to this tragedy.

those were trucks that had brakes designed to stop a fully loaded truck. On the other hand the limo that crashed had brakes that were designed to stop a vehicle of the original size with 5 people on board, not a limo with 18 people on board. So for all we know the issue here, and the lesson that will be learned is that a limo must be refitted with more powerful brakes and that the original brakes will no longer do.

r. Hussain has a long record of criminal activity, and a sketchy record of "assisting" law enforcement, the details of which are cringeworthy. Absoliving him a priori on the basis of a flawed technical argument is reckless and rather ignorant.

No disrespect intended to the victims, but the accident recalled Harry Chapin's song "20,000 Pounds of Bananas."(truck crashed after brakes failed going down long hill) I ruined the brakes on my rental leaving Yosemite via the Coulterville Road. Scariest road I've ever been on; and I was being passed by pick-up trucks which knew the road. I rode the brakes all the way down. I know, I should have switched to low gear, but I could not have imagined that this two lane road could twist and turn and descend for so long. Never again.


More: Limo in deadly crash 'should have been in the scrapyard' Police are investigating the deadly crash, the worst in the U.S. in nine years, as a criminal investigation in large part because of repeated warnings and failed inspections of the 2001 Ford Excursion.  On Wednesday, State Police arrested Nauman Hussain, operator of the limousine company, in the deadly crash. He was charged with criminally negligent homicide, a felony.  State inspectors affixed a sticker taking the vehicle out of service after a Sept. 4 inspection, according to the state Department of Transportation.  "The vehicle was subject to inspections and the owner was warned not to operate the vehicle," DOT spokesman Joseph Morrissey said in a statement. "The vehicle was placed out of service."   But the limousine continued to operate, and a lawyer for the limousine company said the vehicle recently underwent repairs.

e limousine's driver had been stopped by a state trooper in Saratoga Springs in late August after he had driven 11 people in the same vehicle and cited for operating it without a proper license, the Times Union in Albany reported Tuesday.
Nauman Hussain ran the limousine company, Prestige Limo, owned by his father, Shahed Hussain.  driver, Scott Lisinicchia, lacked the proper licensing to drive a large passenger vehicle
lacked the necessary federal registration after it was expanded from an SUV to a limo, 


 appears the company, in fact, was trying to sell the old limousine.
TheTimes Union reported that just two days before the Schoharie crash, Prestige Limo listed it for sale on Craigslist for $9,000
 listing said the limo was "very clean inside and out" and "DOT ready" with 180,000 miles.

 did the limo not have a state inspection, it appeared to lack a federal certificate for an SUV that was converted to a stretch limousine, Cuomo said.


New York limo crash: What we know about Prestige Limousine and ...
https://www.cnn.com/2018/10/11/us/prestige-limousine-chauffer-service.../index.html

22 hours ago - The man charged with criminally negligent homicide in a fatal limousine crash had packed bags in his own car when police stopped him, ...
Owner's son now faces criminal charges
State Police charged Nauman Hussain after arresting him during a traffic stop. Schoharie District Attorney Susan Mallery confirmed to CNN that packed bags were found in his car, which contributed to her office arguing during the bail hearing that he was a flight risk.
Nauman Hussain must surrender his US and Pakistani passports, according to a criminal complaint. However, Hussain's lawyer said his client has been a US citizen for a decade and does not have a Pakistani passport.

As a community mourns, limo owner's story emerges Albany Times Union Man whose son was arrested in Schoharie tragedy has bumpy, not-so-secret past
By Chris Churchill and Larry Rulison Updated 7:08 pm EDT, Sunday, October 14, 2018

Twenty-five years before his son, Nauman Hussain, would be charged with criminally negligent homicide for the Schoharie limousine crash that killed 20 people, Hussain was arrested for a murder in his native Pakistan, he said in 2010 court testimony. The charge was politically motivated, Hussain insisted, adding that his wealthy father bribed police to get him out of jail.

He fled to Moscow, before traveling to Mexico City and illegally crossing into the United States at El Paso, Texas. Nearly broke and without a passport or any identification, he traveled by bus to Albany in 1995 to stay at a friend's Central Avenue apartment...

no ordinary immigrant. His success may have been aided by connections to some of the most wealthy and powerful people in Pakistan. He said his brother is Malik Riaz Hussain, a billionaire considered one of the richest men in that country, and has claimed that former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto bought his son a $40,000 Mercedes...

became friendly with DMV employees because he owned the adjacent Getty station

 provided immigrants with answers they needed to pass the tests. At least once, he helped an immigrant falsify the documents required for a license

 was facing deportation to Pakistan.

work with the FBI led to the arrest of others — his friends, he said in court testimony — who had been involved in the driver's license ring

Under FBI direction, Hussain in 2003 fostered a friendship with a pizza-store owner who occasionally prayed at the mosque. Hussain was wearing a wire when he struck up a conversation with the owner, Mohammed Mosharref Hossain, then 49, about jihad and the possibility of making money on the holy war.

That conversation would lead to the 2004 arrest and conviction of Hossain, who is from Bangladesh, and...

 posing again as a wealthy businessman, convinced four men that they could make money off the jihad. He had offered the men $250,000. The "Newburgh Four," as they became known, were convicted to 25-year sentences for planning to bomb synagogues and take down airplanes.

Critics again said that the FBI and Hussain entrapped Muslims ...

 business portfolio appeared to crumble amid bankruptcy and a fire that destroyed the family's Loudonville home and nearly killed his wife. He claimed to be indigent.

But as he worked controversial cases for the FBI, Hussain and his two sons, Nauman and Shahyer, managed to own and operate a new set of businesses — including Prestige Limo,....

 in 2010, the deed for the motel was transferred from Shahed Hussain's late wife, Yasmeen Begum, to a Malik Riaz Hussain with a Pakistan address....

argued that Hussain lied on financial documents used to buy his initial Albany businesses, including the gas station near the DMV. ....

 nothing about Hussain's story, not even his name, should be taken at face value.

"He's a liar, plain and simple, and he's a sociopath, which makes him a really good undercover person," Braverman said. "He's a chameleon, and a sociopath, and he's lied about everything in every state of his life."...

new attention is being paid to two fires linked to the Hussain family — the one involving his former Loudonville residence and another at Ridge Road Car Care in Queensbury, which burned in 2013 after Shahyer Hussain dropped off a Bentley for repairs. Both resulted in significant insurance payouts.

"If he ran his shop the way I would guess Shahed Hussain would run a business, then it doesn't surprise me if everything in it was shoddy and fraudulent," Braverman said. "There's nothing that he would touch that you would trust. If he fixed your elevator, take the stairs."...

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