Fatal car crash in Falls Village

By Karen BartomioliFALLS VILLAGE – A 41year old man was pronounced dead at the scene of an accident on Route 7 early Saturday morning.The man’s name was Michael Baldwin; the address for him released by state police is on Under Mountain Road in Falls Village. According to police, he had moved to the area recently for a new job, and was staying with a friend.Baldwin was driving south on Route 7 in his 1998 Subaru Legacy when he lost control near where Under Mountain Road forks off to the left, according to the police report. The car apparently crossed the road and slammed into a fence and a tree at a home on the corner. A state plow truck driver radioed the accident in to police. Baldwin was not wearing a seatbelt. The Subaru’s airbag deployed, but the impact was on the driver’s side.A large section of fence was damaged, and homeowner Ameen-Storm Abo-Hamzy said that he believed that if not for the tree, the car may have hit the house at his mother, Ida’s, bedroom. The fence and trees are primarily there for protection.“The force with which it hit was amazing. The vehicle was bent into a “horseshoe,” said Abo-Hamzy. “Fence, car and tree debris was tossed past my birdfeeder 25 to 30 yards away.”It is a bad spot that has had its share of accidents. The sharp curve at the intersection is in the middle of two straightaways where drivers tend to pick up considerable speed on the state highway. Abo-Hamzy said accidents always seem to occur in the winter. That section of road is at a high elevation and open to the wind from the west, so it is likely to ice up faster.Abo-Hamzy said his thoughts were with the man’s family. He was interviewed by the police and was asked repeatedly what he had heard. Woken from a sound sleep, he heard a plow truck go by, quickly followed by three distinctive bangs that he thought was snow being knocked off the plow. It wasn’t until he heard the sirens and they stopped in front of his house that he realized there had been an accident, and that was the banging he heard.Several years ago, after accidents on each road there, Abo-Hamzy installed a flag pole in his front yard. It is lighted at night. The goal was to slow people down, and it seems to work. “A flagpole says there is something interesting there to see. And when people look up at the flag, they naturally slow down. We never used to hear trucks downshift on the curve, and now they do.” Baldwin’s family was notified and his body taken to the chief medical examiner’s office. The accident remains under investigation.

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