Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
'These girls had plenty of time to move'
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Officials are at a loss to explain why two sunbathing teens were struck by a train near the Maine-New Hampshire border.
By NOEL K. GALLAGHER, Staff Writer May 29, 2008
The Associated Press
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The Associated Press
One of the two girls is loaded aboard a LifeFlight of Maine helicopter after the accident in Lebanon.
Gordon Chibroski/Staff Photographer
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Gordon Chibroski/Staff Photographer
Gino Harman of the Lebanon Fire Department, left, guides efforts by Milton (N.H.) Fire and Rescue as they search for evidence Wednesday.
Gordon Chibroski/Staff Photographer
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Gordon Chibroski/Staff Photographer
Items believed to belong to the girls sit by the side of the tracks.
Click here to see the location of the accident.

LEBANON – Two teenage girls who apparently were sunbathing on train tracks skirting the New Hampshire border were severely injured Wednesday when a train hit them, according to emergency personnel.

The train severed a leg of 13-year-old Destiny Phaneuf just below the knee, and severed a foot of 14-year-old Rachel Brown, according to York County Sheriff’s Lt. Gary Fecteau.

Both were taken by helicopter to Maine Medical Center in Portland and were listed in critical and serious condition, respectively, in a special care unit.

The girls were lying on the tracks next to Milton Three Ponds and did not move when the slow-moving train’s whistle blew repeatedly as it approached, Fecteau said.

The 30-car train was going about 15 mph and its operators blew the whistle as they approached the bridge section of the tracks, as they usually do on the daily run between Dover, N.H., and Ossipee, N.H.

“They saw (the girls) and blew the whistle several times,” Fecteau said, describing the conductor’s statement.

The train operators applied the emergency brakes, but were unable to stop in time, he said. “There was no movement, and it wasn’t until (the train was) upon them that they realized they were hit.”

Fecteau said the conductor called in the accident on his cell phone and Milton, N.H., police were the first on the scene. The girls were hit just a few feet from the bridge that defines the state line separating Lebanon and Milton.

Brown, who was conscious when help arrived, told responders that she and Phaneuf had been sunbathing on the railroad tracks.

Brown, whose condition was upgraded from critical to serious late Wednesday, was found on a concrete pillar just off the tracks. Phaneuf was under the train between the rails, Fecteau said.

Officials were at a loss to explain why the girls didn’t move as the train approached.

Neighbors were similarly baffled, saying that even if the girls didn’t hear the whistle because of headphones or some other reason, they should have felt the vibration of the approaching train.

While the spot is popular for fishing or jumping off the trestle into the water, it’s not a place people typically choose to sunbathe, neighbors said.

The narrow, mounded area is covered with large pieces of gravel typically used on train tracks, and some low shrubbery near the waterline.

“I don’t know what they were doing on the tracks,” said Jessica Ragucci, 22, as she held her 5-month-old son and watched police search for evidence in the water and on the tracks. “And there’s no way they didn’t feel the vibration.”

Ragucci and her neighbor, Mishelle West, who heard the train whistles and the screech of the emergency brakes, said the train always moves slowly through the area.

“That’s what I don’t understand,’’ said West, whose living room looks over the placid water behind the Milton Three Ponds dam. “These girls had plenty of time to move.”

Fecteau said there was no indication that the girls were wearing headphones or were otherwise unable to hear the train.

Several business owners in the area said they didn’t see the girls sunbathing or see the accident. Fecteau said Wednesday afternoon that no witnesses had come forward.

When officials reached the girls’ parents, he said, they thought the girls were at school.

A woman answering the phone at the home of Phaneuf’s father said he was not at home.

Officials with School Administrative District 60, which includes Lebanon, rounded up teachers and staff members at Noble Middle School Wednesday afternoon to discuss how to address the incident, said Superintendent Paul Andrade.

School officials will have a crisis team of guidance counselors ready today for students,...


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