Three injured in five-vehicle crash Three people...
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Three injured in five-vehicle crash
Three people were injured in a five-vehicle crash in Newport Beach
on Wednesday night, officials said.
The accident occurred at the intersection of Coast Highway and
Superior Avenue at about 7:20 p.m., when the driver of a Ford
Expedition failed to stop at a red light and rear-ended another car,
causing a chain reaction crash involving three other vehicles in
front, Newport Beach Police accident investigator Mike Schiavi said.
The sport utility vehicle rolled over and came to rest on its
side. The driver of that vehicle, believed to have caused the
accident, was extricated from the vehicle and taken to Western
Medical Center in Santa Ana, Newport Beach Fire Capt. Mike Ybarra
said. The extent of his injuries were not known. Two women who were
in the car ahead of the Expedition were taken to Hoag Hospital,
Ybarra said.
Traffic was backed up for several minutes because of road
closures. East Coast Highway between Prospect Street and Balboa
Boulevard was closed, while West Coast Highway was shut down from
Balboa.
The driver of the Expedition must have hit the car ahead of him at
about 45 or 50 miles an hour, Schiavi said.
Joyce Gillbank of Yorba Linda was heading back home after walking
her dog at the dog park in Huntington Beach when she got rear-ended
by the car in front of the Expedition.
“It all happened so quickly,” she said. “The glass in the back
window went flying. There was so much noise.”
The first car at the intersection was being driven by J.G. Francis
of Costa Mesa.
“I was completely shocked,” he said. “It was so sudden.”
Francis said he tried to help the man in the Expedition.
“His face was covered in blood and a couple of his teeth were
knocked out,” he said. “He was unconscious for a bit, but when he
came to, he started screaming and kept screaming till they came and
got him.”
The crash is under investigation.
Kitaen court hearing postponed
A court hearing for Tawny Kitaen, estranged wife of former Angels
pitcher Chuck Finley, was postponed from Wednesday to Oct. 9.
A judge will determine at that hearing next week if the actress
has met the requirements of her plea deal on a domestic violence case
against Finley in which she agreed to go through anger management
without admitting any wrongdoing or getting probation.
Newport Beach police had responded to a 911 hang-up call at the
couple’s Newport Coast home the night of April 1, 2002. Officials
said they found cuts and bruises on Finley’s arms and face that they
believe were caused by his wife.
Kitaen reportedly got into an argument with her husband while they
were driving home from dinner, kicked him with her high-heeled shoes,
scratched him on the face and pulled his ear, police officials said.
Finley filed divorce papers three days after that altercation,
asking the court to dissolve their four-year marriage based on
“irreconcilable differences.”
Appeal in baseball case dismissed
An Orange County Superior Court judge on Wednesday dismissed an
appeal filed by a Newport Beach parent who accused Corona del Mar
High School’s baseball coach John Emme of ruining his son’s chances
to get a college scholarship.
The judge dismissed the appeal because Marc Martinez did not pay
the mandatory filing fee, according to court papers.
Martinez alleged that his son, J.D., was subjected to public
humiliation and ridicule in a December 2001 story that ran in the
Daily Pilot, and he accused the newspaper and its present sports
editor, Richard Dunn, of libel, saying that they published the
coach’s comments knowing that they were false and libelous.
Martinez’s claims against Emme and the Pilot have been dismissed.
Martinez was also ordered to pay Emme’s attorney’s fees. The Pilot is
seeking similar damages from Martinez.
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