Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Lake-Zoar-boat-accident
Full Text:
Lake Zoar Accident Kills Boater
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
OXFORD -- While skimming southbound on Lake Zoar mid-day Saturday, October 24,
boater Frederick A. Altschuler, 57, of 329 Amity Road, Woodbridge, was ejected
from his speedboat and killed after apparently striking an object submerged in
the lake.
The state Department of Environmental Protection's (DEP) law enforcement
division is investigating the cause of the accident.
The accident occurred about 12:11 pm approximately 1,000 feet north of the
Jackson Cove boat launch on the Oxford side of the lake.
State police said Mr Altschuler was alone in his racing boat and making a
southbound high-speed run when apparently the boat struck a submerged object
and swerved, ejecting Mr Altschuler from it into the lake.
Mr Altschuler was piloting a 1991 mid-sized, STV twin-hull, outboard-powered
racing boat, according to the DEP.
Mr Altschuler reportedly was rapidly recovered from the water by another
boater.
The victim was transported by Life Star helicopter to Yale-New Haven Hospital
where he was pronounced dead at 1:16 pm, according to DEP.
Mr Altschuler's body was transported to the chief state medical examiner's
office in Farmington for an autopsy. A spokeswoman for that office said Mr
Altschuler died of "cranial cerebral blunt force trauma," or a severe head
injury.
The cause of the boating accident is under investigation by DEP's boating
accident reconstruction team.
Sergeant Eric Nelson, spokesman for DEP's conservation enforcement unit, said
Tuesday Mr Altschuler was wearing a life vest, crash helmet, and face visor
when the accident occurred.
The speed limit on Lake Zoar is 45 miles per hour. Sgt Nelson said DEP
investigators will attempt to determine the boat's speed at impact in their
investigation into the accident. Speed may be determined by studying engine
gauges or by inspecting boat damage, Sgt Nelson said.
"We don't have an actual determination yet as to how it occurred," Sgt Nelson
said.
Investigators found a mostly submerged object floating in the water which the
boat may have hit, the sergeant said. The object was floating, but most of it
was below the water's surface, he said.
The investigation into the crash may take anywhere from a few weeks to several
months, the sergeant said.
Boat damage will be inspected. Laboratory testing may be required; scrapings
from objects in the collision may be obtained, he said.
Several witnesses to the accident have been interviewed, Sgt Nelson said.