A
six-week-old girl died Thursday morning after falling with her mother
down an elevator shaft in a Brooklyn, New York, apartment building,
according to police.
"I heard the lady screaming," Hopeton Stewart, a building tenant, told CNN affiliate WABC. "I heard her crying and screaming."
According
to NYPD detective Ahmed Nasser, 21-year-old Aber Al-Rabahi attempted to
push her child's stroller into the elevator, which was out of service,
on the 23rd floor. It is unknown if there was an out-of-service note on
it.
But the elevator wasn't there,
and instead Al-Rabahi and her daughter, Areej Ali, fell onto the roof of
the elevator approximately 5 feet below, with the mother landing on top
of the child and causing injuries, Nasser told CNN.
The elevator then dropped even further to the 17th floor, where they were taken out by an elevator mechanic.
A
police statement says officers at the scene found the baby girl
unconscious and unresponsive. She was pronounced dead at Coney Island
Hospital, where her mother was treated and released. The medical
examiner has not yet determined the cause of death and the investigation
is ongoing.
In an interview with
CNN affiliates WABC and NY1, Salah Ali, the baby's grandfather, said he
is heartbroken and that his daughter is in "bad shape."
Elevator safety violations
The
Brooklyn apartment complex has faced multiple complaints in the past,
with more than 120 elevator violations since 2005 and hundreds of
inspections, New York Department of Buildings records show.
"I'm
not very surprised -- there have been a lot of problems with the
elevators. People get stuck in them all the time," a building resident,
who gave her name as Diana, told NY1. Another resident who was not
identified by NY1 recalled he got stuck in an elevator during the first
month of his move into the complex.
"It's heartbreaking, honestly," he told NY1 about the incident. "I don't know how to react to something like that."
According to the city's buildings department, there are 10 elevators in the multi-building complex, which was built in 1974.
The
elevator involved in the incident was inspected in early August 2016,
and one non-hazardous violation was issued regarding an inoperative
phone in the elevator car. The building inspectors determined that the
elevator could safely remain in operation.
The
service company for the building's elevators is Centennial Elevator
Industries, a member of the Elevator Industries Association, according
to Michael Halpin of the International Union of Elevator Constructors
(IUEC) Local One.
The IUEC is
promoting the Elevator Safety Act -- state legislation that would set
minimum training standards for elevator mechanics in New York -- a bill
Halpin said Elevator Industries Association opposes.
"They don't want to provide the level of training and education the bill requires," Halpin said.
While
not referring specifically to Thursday's incident in Brooklyn, Halpin
said mandatory training for elevator mechanics could help prevent such
incidents.
Centennial Elevator Industries declined to comment. The Elevator Industries Association did not respond to CNN's inquiries.
Jordan
Isenstadt, a consultant for Starrett Corp., which owns the property,
confirmed Centennial Elevator Industries is the building's service
company.
Investigation opened
Starrett
released a statement expressing sadness over the tragic incident,
which, according to the statement, "involved an elevator under repair at
the Bay Park Two Complex."
The
company said the incident is "now under active investigation and we are
cooperating fully with all authorities and agencies to determine the
facts surrounding the event. We extend our deepest sympathies to the
families involved and management is making arrangements to offer grief
counseling upon request," the statement said.
The elevator unit involved is now under a cease-use order.
"Our
inspectors will remain on scene to conduct a full investigation into
this tragic accident," said Andrew Rudansky, a spokesperson for the
buildings department. "We will be testing all of the elevators in the
complex to ensure they are operating safely."
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