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Last updated on May 30, 2012 at 9:06 EDT

Gov. Corzine in Great Pain, Lucky to Be Alive

April 13, 2007
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By Dwight Ott and Elisa Ung, The Philadelphia Inquirer

Apr. 13–Gov. Corzine’s condition remained critical today as he began recovering from a shattered thigh bone and a dozen broken ribs when his SUV was run off the Garden State Parkway last night.

“Based on the pictures I’ve seen of the crash, I think he was lucky,” said Dr. Steven Ross, a trauma surgeon at Cooper University Hospital in Camden.

Ross said today at a news conference that Corzine remains in intensive care, breathing on a ventilator and heavily sedated for pain to his chest.

The governor can communicate by nodding his head, Ross said.

Corzine’s injuries are “extremely painful,” said Ross. “It hurts to breathe.”

Corzine’s children have been at the hospital. His daughter, Jennifer Corzine, said her father “is a fighter.”

Corzine was injured Thursday night when his Chevy Tahoe, in an attempt to avoid an accident, swerved into a guardrail on the Garden State Parkway.

Corzine had been on his way from an Atlantic City speech to host a private meeting between radio show host Don Imus and the Rutgers University women’s basketball team at Drumthwacket, the governor’s mansion in Princeton.

Steven Ross, head of the hospital’s trauma unit, said the governor had fractured ribs, a broken left leg, and chest injuries. He did not suffer any head injuries.

Former governor and current State Senate President Richard J. Codey was serving as New Jersey’s acting governor, Corzine spokesman Anthony Coley said.

Also injured was Robert Rasinski, the state trooper who was driving Corzine’s Tahoe, who was also treated at Cooper. Officials said Rasinski asked that his injuries not be disclosed.

Corzine’s personal assistant, Samantha Gordon, was in the backseat of the car behind Rasinski, and was not seriously injured.

Col. Joseph R. “Rick” Fuentes, superintendent of the New Jersey State Police, said that the accident occurred near mile marker 43.5 shortly after 6 p.m., when a red pickup truck cut off a white Dodge Ram and forced it into the path of the governor’s sport-utility vehicle.

Rasinski swerved to try to avoid that vehicle and lost control of the Chevrolet, sending it into the center median and striking a guardrail, Fuentes said.

Corzine was seated in the front seat, and state police were investigating whether he was wearing a seat belt.

After the accident, the red pickup truck did not stop, and police were looking for its driver, Fuentes said.

Witnesses told police that the man behind the wheel of the red pickup — the vehicle responsible for the crash — had been seen driving erratically before the accident. The driver of the Dodge Ram stopped and gave statements to police.

At mile maker 43.5 point, the Garden State Parkway is a four-lane highway divided by a wide grassy median bisected by a metal guardrail. Its speed limit is 65 m.p.h. The Garden State Parkway, which runs along the Jersey Shore, is a toll road and investigators were expected to look at toll-booth cameras to see whether the vehicle was caught on film.

Fuentes said that Rasinski had done a “tremendous job” maintaining what control he could over the Chevrolet. He added that conditions were dry at the time, and that speed and alcohol did not appear to be factors.

Officials did not, however, indicate how fast the vehicles had been traveling.

At the scene in Galloway Township, the SUV was smashed up against the guardrail along the median of the parkway. All the doors were open, and the front driver’s side had been smashed in.

State police were investigating with the help of a high-powered mobile lamp.

A trooper, flashlight in hand, was seen combing the woods and the grass near where the accident occurred, and police were looking at heavy skid marks in the SUV’s track.

As night fell, the accident investigation backed traffic up for nearly three miles, with only one lane getting by.

Corzine was returning in a two-car caravan from public events in Atlantic City, including a speech before the New Jersey Conference of Mayors at the Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort.

Galloway Township Mayor Thomas Bassford said a swarm of Galloway Township emergency medical technicians and firefighters from the Pomona Volunteer Fire Department were called to assist with the accident, which he called “extremely bad.”

“It was a little surprising to hear it happened here, almost right in my own backyard,” said Bassford, who lives about a half-mile from the accident scene.

“And what really worried me is when I heard that the governor had been taken to Cooper by chopper when we have two hospitals, one with a trauma center, virtually minutes from where the accident happened.”

When asked why Corzine was taken to a Camden hospital instead of closer hospitals in the Atlantic City area, Fuentes said that it was a short flight by medical helicopter. “This is a great trauma center,” Fuentes said.

Corzine is the third New Jersey governor in recent history to suffer a broken leg.

Jim E. McGreevey broke his leg in a fall from Cape May’s promenade in 2002, and was also airlifted to a hospital in another part of the state, Robert Wood Johnson Medical Center in New Brunswick.

Christine Todd Whitman broke her leg in 1992 while on a ski trip in Switzerland.

Contact staff writer Elisa Ung at 609-989-9016 or eung@phillynews.com.

Inquirer staff writer Melanie Burney contributed to this article.

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Copyright (c) 2007, The Philadelphia Inquirer

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News.

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