3nd person dies in Chinatown tour bus crash in Delaware

Thursday, October 2, 2014
2nd person dies in Chinatown bus in Delaware
Lisa Colagrossi reports on a deadly bus crash in Delaware that also left dozens injured

BEAR, Del. -- Police say a third passenger injured in a Delaware bus crash last month has died.



Delaware State Police Sgt. Paul G. Shavack said in an email that 43-year-old Jyostina Poojari of Mumbai, India, died Thursday morning at Christiana Hospital in Newark. She was taken there after the Sept. 21 crash in Bear.



Two other passengers were killed and dozens were injured when the bus overturned on a curved exit ramp.



The driver, 56-year-old Jinli Zhao of Flushing, New York, has been charged with two counts of operating a vehicle causing the death of another person.



Officials said the accident did not involve other vehicles and happened in New Castle in the northern part of the state, south of Wilmington.



Shavack said there were 49 passengers on the bus when it was traveling on an exit ramp. The bus was going through a curve when it left the road and overturned. The bus slid on its roof down a grass embankment and came to rest on its left side, Shavack said.





Hua'y Chen, a 54-year-old woman from New York City, was found under the bus and was pronounced dead at the scene, Shavack said. Idil Bahsi, a 30-year-old woman from Istanbul, Turkey, was taken to a hospital and died Sunday night.



The other passengers were taken to area hospitals for injuries varying in severity.



The passengers were taking a 3-day sightseeing tour to Washington that began Friday in New York, authorities said. The crash happened as the bus was heading back to New York.



State police told The News Journal newspaper of Wilmington (http://delonline.us/1rdxqZm) there were no apparent witnesses outside the bus to the crash.



But Elvis D'cruz, 19, told The Associated Press he was driving in the area with a friend when he came upon the overturned bus. He said he and his friend pulled over and were there before first responders arrived.



"Everyone was in pain and crying out for help," said D'cruz, a student at Penn State Brandywine in Pennsylvania.



He said the group of passengers included mostly adults, many of them speaking different languages including Hindi, Mandarin, Spanish and Portuguese.



"There was not one person without blood on them," he said, adding that he and his friend handed out items from a first aid kit.



D'cruz said the bus had overturned on an off-ramp from Delaware's Route 1 that is known for being steep.



Shavack said the bus belonged to Am USA Express Incorporated, a bus company based in New York.



Photographs taken at the scene showed the bus lying on the driver's side on a grassy shoulder. The photographs showed at least two people with neck braces lying in the grass while a group of others were sitting nearby.



Video footage taken at the site showed emergency officials leaning over to attend the injured and placing victims on stretchers as ambulances and other emergency vehicles stood by. Debris was scattered about and a ladder had been set up alongside the overturned bus. Later photographs published online showed the bus had been righted.



The National Transportation Safety Board was expected to open an investigation, police told The News Journal.

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