headline
Full Text:
Harrowing Accident In Dodgingtown
(with photo)
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
Emergency service workers converged in Dodgingtown midday Tuesday after a man
who was driving a pickup truck around a steep curve on Dodgingtown Road lost
control of the vehicle and rolled over, becoming trapped upside down in the
truck.
Police said motorist Michael Mullens, 45, of Bethel was driving a 1988 Toyota
pickup truck westbound on Dodgingtown Road about 11:40 am when he failed to
negotiate a sharp right curve in the road, went out of control and flipped
over, coming to rest pointed eastbound on the westbound road shoulder.
The Newtown Volunteer Ambulance Corps transported Mr Mullen to Danbury
Hospital where he was treated for injuries and released, a hospital
spokeswoman said.
The flipped truck came to rest at the base of the hill across Dodgingtown Road
from George's Pizza and Restaurant. The accident occurred in the same area
where a gasoline tanker truck crashed and burned in October 1996, causing the
death of its driver, extensive property damage and gasoline contamination of
local soil and ground water.
A man who was driving by the pickup truck accident Tuesday soon after it
occurred stopped and lifted up the rear end of the flipped pickup truck with a
small earth loader he had been towing, thus helping emergency workers gain
access to Mr Mullen, police said.
Lew Belinsky, a Naugatuck excavating and landscaping contractor, said Thursday
he saw that Mr Mullens' head was pinned in an awkward position between the
truck seat and the roof of the truck, so he used his loader to raise the
truck, taking its weight off Mr Mullens' head.
"It was a life threatening situation. I didn't do anything heroic. I just
wanted to make sure things didn't get any worse for the guy," Mr Belinksy
said.
Dodgingtown, Newtown Hook and Ladder, and Hawleyville firefighters went to the
accident scene to work on Mr Mullens' extrication. He had become trapped
upside down in a crouched position in the driver's seat of the truck with his
seatbelt attached. Being strapped into the truck with the seatbelt kept him
from falling down onto the flipped interior roof of the truck cab, police
said.
Working in a drizzle, firefighters used a hydraulic tool to cut and pry the
driver's door away from the truck and gain access to Mr Mullens. Workers
placed blocks under the truck to prevent it from shifting. A wrecker crane was
used to stabilize the vehicle. Mr Mullen had been trapped in the truck for
about 40 minutes before being freed.
A group of bystanders watched from the restaurant's parking lot as police,
fire and ambulance crews worked on the extrication. Firefighters stood by
holding hoses charged with water in the event of a fire. Traffic in the area
was detoured away from the scene.
Police said the accident is under investigation.