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FDNY firefighters rescue woman, 3 children from underneath fallen tree

FDNY said the woman was pushing a stroller with two children inside and holding an infant when the Central Park tree fell on them

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FDNY said an adult and three children have been taken to a hospital after the tree fell in Central Park.

AP Photo/Mary Altaffer

By Alex Bazeley and Polly Higgins
amNewYork

NEW YORK — A woman walking with her three young children in Central Park Tuesday morning was struck and pinned by a large tree. All four have been taken to the hospital after the woman was freed around 10:10, the FDNY said.

The mother was pushing her boys, ages 4 and 2, in a stroller and carrying her infant son when the tree fell, officer Meghan O’Leary of the NYPD’s Mounted Unit said.

The woman was hit in the head and was in and out of consciousness as the FDNY worked to remove the tree, FDNY spokesman Frank Dwyer said. After cutting some limbs off the tree to prevent it from rolling, firefighters were able to remove it from her about nine minutes after initially receiving the call, he said.

The infant was on his mother when she was struck, O’Leary said, and he was quickly removed by civilians before the horseback unit arrived. He had scrapes and bruises and was crying, she said.

Civilians and the NYPD worked together to clear debris and smaller branches from the mother, Officer Joseph Tomeo of the Mounted Unit said, before the FDNY arrived with chainsaws.

Antonio Russo of Williamsburg was riding his bike and was about 100 yards away when the tree fell near West 62nd Street.

“I heard a huge crack,” Russo, 57, said. “It was like slow motion coming down. Initially I didn’t think anyone was under there.”

Russo said he saw the woman pushing a stroller prior to the incident. After she was released from underneath, “she was hysterical,” he said. “She just really wanted her baby.”

The family was taken to NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, Dwyer said. Their condition was not immediately known.

While it’s too early to tell why the tree fell, Geoffrey Croft, the president of NYC Park Advocates said, a tree’s health often plays a role.

“We look for if the tree is dead, dying or diseased,” Croft said. “Obviously it’s very tragic what happened here today, so we want to figure out why the tree fell.”

Copyright 2017 amNewYork

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