Quantcast
Last updated on May 28, 2012 at 6:07 EDT

Corzine’s Surgery a Success, Doctors Say

April 14, 2007
Repost This
76342910a40d9a6e76af13eb59caa4ae1

By MARYCLAIRE DALE

CAMDEN, N.J. – Surgery on Gov. Jon S. Corzine’s injured leg was successful Saturday, while state police said the driver blamed for the wreck that critically injured the governor had been found but would not be charged.

Corzine’s recovery was progressing better than doctors expected, said Dr. Steven Ross, head of trauma at Cooper University Hospital. Doctors cleaned a 6-inch wound during surgery on his left thigh.

The governor is not able to speak and not aware of his surroundings because of his heavy sedation. He is expected to remain on a ventilator until at least Monday, doctors said.

"He awakens, answers to simple ‘yes or no’ questions about pain," Ross said. "He won’t remember much of what is going on at this point."

Corzine was hurt Thursday when the SUV he was riding in was clipped by a vehicle that swerved to avoid a red pickup truck that officials said was being driven erratically. Corzine’s vehicle slammed into a guard rail along the Garden State Parkway in Galloway Township, near Atlantic City.

The 20-year-old driver of the red truck involved in the wreck was found Friday night at an Atlantic City casino where he works and interviewed by police, police said. He wasn’t charged because he didn’t realize he caused the crash, police said.

The driver’s identity was not released because he was not charged, state police said.

A state official who spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak publicly, said the driver was a "special needs driver" who may have a mental impairment.

Corzine – who was riding in a sport utility vehicle driven by a state trooper and headed to a meeting between radio show host Don Imus and the Rutgers women’s basketball team – apparently was not wearing his seat belt, as required by law.

In addition, the vehicle’s air bags may have not inflated, according to Tom Shea, the governor’s chief of staff.

The governor’s femur bone was broken in two places, and it protruded through his skin. He also suffered a broken sternum, 12 broken ribs, a head laceration and a minor fracture on a lower vertebra, according to doctors at Cooper University Hospital in Camden, where he was flown by helicopter after the crash. Corzine, 60, did not appear to suffer any brain damage.

His injuries were not considered life-threatening, but doctors say the governor faces lengthy rehabilitation. And it will likely be at least three to six months before he can walk normally.

A similar surgery to clean out Corzine’s femur was planned again Monday, Dr. Robert F. Ostrum said.

Tom Shea, the governor’s chief of staff, said he was hopeful Corzine could resume his duties in "a week or so," depending on doctor recommendations. Shea said it was possible Corzine would govern from his hospital bed.

Corzine was moved to the trauma intensive care unit after surgery Thursday night and remained in critical but stable condition Saturday.

Senate President Richard Codey officially became acting governor Thursday evening after getting a fax from Corzine’s office saying the governor had been injured.

Associated Press writer Beth DeFalco contributed to this report from Trenton.