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Miss Deaf Texas Struck by train, killed

from cnn:

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- The reigning Miss Deaf Texas died after being struck by a train,
officials said.

Tara Rose McAvoy, 18, was walking Monday near railroad tracks when she was struck by a Union Pacific train, authorities said.

A witness told Austin television station KTBC the train sounded its horn right up until the accident occurred.

McAvoy, who had been deaf since birth, won the state title in June and represented the state "with dignity and pride," state pageant director Laura Loeb-Hill told The Associated Press via e-mail Monday night.

McAvoy was to represent Texas at the Miss Deaf America pageant this summer, Loeb-Hill said.

McAvoy graduated last year from the Texas School for the Deaf, attended Austin Community College and then started at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., in January, but had returned to Texas, Loeb-Hill said.





UPDATE: http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/03/15/miss.deaf.texas/index.html

CNN) -- Deaf beauty contest winner Tara McAvoy was walking along the railroad tracks from her Austin, Texas, home to her mother's workplace, text-messaging family and friends, when a train struck her, according to the Austin Police Department.

A Massachusetts-born Texan, who liked to quote "Don't mess with Texas," the 18-year-old was going to represent the Lone Star State at the Miss Deaf America Pageant in Palm Desert, California, this July.

It was one of many pageants McAvoy had entered, "both in the hearing community and in the deaf community," said Claire Bugen, superintendent of the Texas School for the Deaf, on Wednesday. McAvoy was a 2005 graduate of the school, where she played sports and acted in theater.

"She was a beautiful, bright, young deaf woman," said Bugen.

The Austin Police Department received a 911 call from Union-Pacific, which owns the train, at 2:18 p.m. Monday, said Laura Albrecht, spokesperson for the Austin Police Department.

"Our understanding is that she text-messaged the family, and yes, the family members were going to pick her up," Albrecht added.

McAvoy was walking northbound along the railroad ties, with her back to the train as it approached, said Austin Police Department detective David Fugitt. "We have information that she was text-messaging family and friends" at the time, he added.

A horn sounded, but "they weren't able to get a response" from her, Fugitt said.

"At that point, they activated their emergency braking system, but they weren't able to stop in time."

A snowplow -- commonly referred to as "cattle-guards" for pushing items away from the tracks to avoid train damage -- was what struck McAvoy, who was estimated to be "no more than a foot" from the tracks, Fugitt said.

"The snowplow extends approximately 16 inches on each side from the train," he said, and was mounted to the front engine of the train.

McAvoy died at the scene from "multiple traumatic injuries," Fugitt said.

Fugitt said there were witnesses who had heard the horn sound and that the police department was actively seeking anyone who had seen the accident occur.

An investigation is under way with Union Pacific and the Travis County Medical Examiner's Office, Fugitt said. He said the Austin Police Department was awaiting information from Union Pacific on how fast the train, with its 24 cars and two engines, was going.

McAvoy's funeral is set for Saturday morning in Austin.

In addition to her schooling at the Texas School for the Deaf, McAvoy briefly attended the Model Secondary School for the Deaf, which is affiliated with Gallaudet University, in Washington. A profile on its Web site said McAvoy was class president, a cheerleader, on the prom committee and played basketball.

"She will be sorely missed," said Laura Loeb-Hill, director of the Miss Deaf Texas Pageant, in an e-mail Wednesday. "Tara represented Texas with dignity and pride."

 
i really really don't want to laugh at the "A witness told Austin television station KTBC the train sounded its horn right up until the accident occurred. "
 
Originally posted by: deadlyapp
i really really don't want to laugh at the "A witness told Austin television station KTBC the train sounded its horn right up until the accident occurred. "

LOL! oh me..
 
Sounds like she wasn't very bright. Come on! She's deaf. She knows she's deaf and needs to take extra caution. What's she do? Walks next to the train tracks! Didn't she at least feel the vibrations from train? It's not like they're small vehicles.
 
I want to know what a deaf person was doing "walking near railroad tracks," specifically close enough that she was hit and killed by the train.
 
Originally posted by: biggestmuff
Sounds like she wasn't very bright. Come on! She's deaf. She knows she's deaf and needs to take extra caution. What's she do? Walks next to the train tracks! Didn't she at least feel the vibrations from train? It's not like they're small vehicles.

Exactly what I was thinking
 
Originally posted by: Accipiter22
Originally posted by: wvtalbot
omg......can't.....stop.....laughing.

that's terrible....I feel so bad for her 🙁

Dude tens of thousands of people die every day, do you feel sorry for them all? All because she was a deaf beauty queen doesn't make her life any more important than all the others.

and besides

thats damn funny.
 
Originally posted by: wvtalbot
Originally posted by: Accipiter22
Originally posted by: wvtalbot
omg......can't.....stop.....laughing.

that's terrible....I feel so bad for her 🙁

Dude tens of thousands of people die every day, do you feel sorry for them all? All because she was a deaf beauty queen doesn't make her life any more important than all the others.

and besides

thats damn funny.

Doesn't make it any less tragic. I'm sorry but I don't find it funny either. 🙁

 
that is sad. 🙁
rose.gif
 
Originally posted by: BMdoobieW
I want to know what a deaf person was doing "walking near railroad tracks," specifically close enough that she was hit and killed by the train.

true. she knew that she was deaf and that she can't hear traffic as it's coming. so why walk near train tracks?!?!
 
it's not funny, but along with the posts above I do wonder why she was walking close enough to the railroad tracks to get hit by the train...I can hear very well and even I wouldn't do that...
 
Seriously though, as sad as that is, why was she even walking by the tracks? Not exactly a great reflection on their Miss Deaf Texas if she doesn't have the common sense to stay away from fast-moving strings of 100-ton pieces of metal (the train 😉).
 
It's sad when any person dies, but that was a Darwin candidate in every sense of the term. And yes, I laughed.
 
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