VICTIMS: Collapsed apartment building claimed at least 15. A buckled freeway killed another. Many died at the epicenter, but one was 102 miles away.
It was, as always, the most fickle of catastrophes, bestowing death with nature's cold caprice: Fifteen from a stucco Northridge apartment
building. Two from a million-dollar home in Sherman Oaks. One from Skid Row. One from the ranks of the Los Angeles police.
Elizabeth Ann Brace, mother of two, was in her home in Rancho
Cucamonga, 102 miles from the epicenter of Monday's Northridge quake.
Death found her anyway. When she ran to check the baby, officials said,
she apparently tripped on a toy, fell and dashed her skull against her
child's crib. Her husband, a gray-haired, bespectacled man, was in the next room checking on their 5-year-old son. By Monday afternoon, he said, he still had not mustered the courage to tell his children their mother is gone.
Brace's death was the most distant, but it was by no means the only
one. By nightfall, the death toll from the 6.6 magnitude earthquake had
reached an unofficial count of 33. At least six were victims of heart
attacks. The others were casualties of chaos and its aftermath.
- In the stucco-and-steel rubble that had been the Northridge Meadows
apartment complex on Reseda Boulevard, firefighters had found 15 bodies
by late Monday, all from the flattened first floor. Survivors said the
three-story building began to collapse when the first jolts of the quake
knocked out the ground-floor pilings that supported the parking garage.
As the earth rolled, they said, the middle floors collapsed as if they
were a house of cards. First, witnesses said, the air was filled with
screams. Then it was suffused with silence. Among the youngest victims
was a 14-year-old boy, Howard Lee, who had left his boarding school to
visit his parents.
- On the pitch-black overpass where the Antelope Valley Freeway segues
into the Golden State; an LAPD motorcycle officer plunged to his death
when his vehicle catapulted over a gaping hole in the buckled asphalt.
Witnesses watched, horrified, as Clarence Wayne Dean, 46, of Lancaster, a
26-year veteran of the force, flew off the edge of the bridge and
plummeted 40 feet to the pavement below.
"His lights were still flashing and he just came tumbling down," said
Andy Jimenez, 33, of Santa Clarita. "It was unreal."
LAPD Lt. John Dunkin said Dean apparently did not realize in the dark
that the freeway had collapsed, and he was unable to stop in time. Dean,
assigned to the Valley Traffic Division, is survived by a 26-year-old
son, Dunkin said.
- In Room 610 of a Skid Row flophouse, a mentally ill former convict
died without a witness to say whether it was an accident or a suicide.
Jose Hernandez either fell or jumped from his open window when the
Frontier Hotel at Main and 5th streets began to sway. Authorities did not
discover his body until about 15 minutes later, when security guards
began to evacuate the establishment.
Police said it appeared that Hernandez, a transient in his 40s, was
taken by surprise when the building began to shudder and that he fell
accidentally. But the manager of the hotel, where he had stayed off and
on since November, said Hernandez's parole officer had described him as
unstable; he speculated that the man had "panicked and jumped."
- On a canyontop cul-de-sac in Sherman Oaks, on a street known
for its breathtaking views, Mark Yupp, a 31-year-old entertainment industry
executive, and his 32-year-old fiancee, Kerry, were found dead in what
was left of their downstairs bedroom. Police said the two were apparently
asleep when the quake uprooted their hillside home. Beams and wiring,
furniture and concrete were scattered for more than 100 yards down the
slope from the house's foundation, punctuated in two spots by the
wreckage of their cars, a BMW and a Porsche.
More than a dozen neighbors, barefoot and shivering, tried to rescue
the couple, digging frantically with their hands. But when aftershocks
hit, they said, they were forced to run to safety. Only the couple's
whimpering puppy survived.
"Someone yelled up the street in the darkness, 'Dial 911! The house
here went down the hill, the cars, everything!' " said Chuck Mitchell,
53, a retired sheriff's deputy who was staying in a nearby house. "We all
ran down there with our flashlights, but we couldn't see anything. The
house was totally gone."
- Nearby, in the 3600 block of Beverly Ridge Drive, another
mountainview home was knocked off its stilts and down the side of a
canyon, trapping and killing a 4-year-old girl. Bert Lockwood, a neighbor
whose own home sustained considerable damage, said it took firefighters
about two hours to scramble down the hill and cut through the debris with
chainsaws to free the home's owners, Stas Vigil and Nancy Tyere. But it
was not until midmorning, he said, that rescue workers were able to
locate their daughter, Amy. Lockwood said he watched sadly as the workers
wrapped the little body in a blanket and took her away. "You could look
down the hill and see teddy bears and pink blankets," he said.
The child was the youngest known casualty late Monday, authorities
said, but they warned that the toll probably will rise.
Emergency workers said Monday that it will take as long as two weeks
to clear the debris from the spot where the Antelope Valley Freeway
collapsed onto the Golden State and to unearth any vehicles that might
have been crushed there. And several of those injured at Northridge
Meadows remained in critical condition Monday night.
Meanwhile, as night fell, coroner's investigators continued to
increase the death toll: a Chatsworth man who was fatally struck on the
head by a falling object inside his mobile home. A 45-year-old man in the
Fairfax area who also suffered a fatal head injury. A 92-year-old woman
who died in a trailer fire in Northridge. And a 25-year-old Sherman Oaks
man who was electrocuted when he touched a wire.
As coroners' investigators struggled to identify the dead, survivors
grappled with the devastation of sudden loss.
"I have a hard time explaining how she fell so hard," said Brace's
stricken husband, Thomas, 49, standing red-eyed in the pastel living room
of their four-bedroom Rancho Cucamonga home. Surrounded by a litter of
Aladdin coloring books and baby toys, Brace seemed stunned as he
recounted the particulars of their life.
He and Elizabeth, he said, had married late and had moved from Lomita
to the Inland Empire because they could afford a bigger home and she
could afford to become a full-time homemaker and mom.
"Everything was exactly as we had planned it," he said. "Except we
didn't plan this morning."
They were in bed, he said, when they felt the jolt. They waited a
moment before rising to check on the children. He went to their
daughter's room while she ran to check on their son, 17 months. He heard
a thump, he said, and found his wife unconscious near the crib.
San Bernardino County Coroner's Deputy Monika Padilla said an autopsy
is pending, "but from the looks of things, it looked like she just hit
the crib the wrong way--like it was just one of those freak accidents."
Her husband was at a loss for words. Asked to describe his wife, he looked blankly at a reporter.
"I loved her very much," was all he could say.
The Toll
A magnitude 6.6 earthquake, centered in Northridge, struck at 4:31 a.m. Monday. Officials reported the following:
- DAMAGE: Sections of several freeways and highways were closed after suffering major damage. Utility service was disrupted for hundreds of thousands of people. Damage to homes and businesses was reported as far north as Fillmore and as far south as Anaheim.
- DEATHS: At least 33 deaths were reported, 15 at the Northridge
Meadows apartments. Hundreds of people throughout the area were injured.
- CURFEW: Mayor Richard Riordan declared a citywide curfew, making it illegal for people to remain on the streets between dusk and dawn.
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