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Irma Zamora: Two Good Samaritans Fatally Electrocuted at Scene of Chaotic SUV Crash in San Fernando Valley

Categories: Crash

irma zamora.jpeg
@LilBritt_Britt via Twitter
Irma Zamora died for a good deed.
Repeated attempts to lend a hand at a hectic accident scene in the San Fernando Valley went south last night, City News Service reports.

After a big white Chevy SUV lost control while trying to make a turn at Magnolia Boulevard around 8:25 p.m. -- knocking over a street lamp, downing power lines, shearing off a fire hydrant and landing on someone's front lawn in the Valley Village neighborhood -- witnesses rushed to assist its occupants. Unfortunately, though, electrical currents had begun rippling through the hydrant puddle...

... killing two female Good Samaritans that passed through it. And, according to reports, as many as five more people who attempted to help those women were "hospitalized with serious burns" after inadvertently stepping in the deadly puddle or touching someone who had.

Irma Zamora, a 40-year-old Burbank resident, has been identified as one of the women electrocuted to death at the crash scene.

valley village crash.jpg
NBC4
"I heard the skid of a car...at least three seconds long, and then a very loud boom," witness James Pike tells NBC4. "I run outside and across the street I see two women laying on the sidewalk. I see two or three young gentlemen keep trying to rescue them and pull them to safety and each time they would try to pull them they were getting shocked."

This morning, the Department of Water and Power was quick to issue a list of precautions to take in the presence of a downed water line -- including "don't touch anyone in contact with a power source" and...

"... if standing water is present, stay in your car and wait for help. If you must get out, make sure you do not touch the metal parts of the car and the ground at the same time. The safest exit method is to open the door, stand on the door sill and jump free without touching the car."

L.A. City Fire Department spokesman Erik Scott called last night's SUV crash and Good Samaritan pileup a "a tragic, tragic accident," in which "we have many people with good intentions trying to save people and two of them died as a result."

"It was a mess," nearby resident Jackie Montgomery tells the Los Angeles Times.

Montgomery praises Valley Village community members for being so willing to help each other, despite the fatal consequences -- and ultimately blames the SUV driver, who she says was speeding, for allowing the crash to occur. Also the city, for not putting in stop signs.

About an hour ago, a Twitter user named Brittany Aguilar wrote: "R.I.P my beautiful Aunt/Godmother Irma Zamora January 9, 1972-August 22, 2012."

[@simone_electra / swilson@laweekly.com / @LAWeeklyNews]

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6 comments
rabbipedro
rabbipedro

The driver was another street racing Armenian. When will we grow some balls and start deporting these smelly, hairy bastards? 

shon
shon

This was a family friend!! god bless her soul!! I still can't believe it!! As for that speeding 19 year old driver!!  You definetly should get punished!!  You will go with this for the rest of your life!

D2ThaC
D2ThaC like.author.displayName 1 Like

This happened almost outside my door. What a horrible, senseless and unnecessary tragedy. My heart goes out to the victims' families & friends. If I had witnessed this, I probably would have been dead too. Because that's the kind of thing I do - try to help people in need (I've done similar things in the past).

 

And let me say one more thing to the driver of the crashed vehicle...assuming you really were driving recklessly....

 

EFF YOU!!!!!!! Eff you and the rest of your "I'm more important than you" clones!

 

This city is full of reckless, speeding and rude drivers that do not giving an effing sh!t about anyone other than themselves! I see it every effing day in Los Angeles, and it seems to be getting worse. The cell phone drivers who are distracted, the lane-dodging speeders, the rolling stoppers who don't look both ways, the ragers, the cigarette throwers, etc....all these scumbags. It makes life worse for the rest of us. All because of this sh!tty "me first, you never" attitude. 

 

How much more destruction are you going to cause?! Grow up, you a--holes!

 

 

Larry
Larry

 @D2ThaC But you didn't try to help and you didn't die.  Give respect to those who lost their lives and appreciate you weren't one of them instead of being glib.  About 5-10K people could say that happened on their doorstep, so don't be a Wahlberg about it.  And don't use this as a way to blow your top about people throwing cigarettes out their window, you're conflating a bunch of behavior you don't like with this tragedy, and very little of which is unique to this city.  As far as I can tell about 80% of drivers in this city are speeding or acting recklessly at some point, regardless of age. So while this is an exceptionally awful outcome, I'm not sure it helps to get out the torches and pitchforks for the driver. 

D2ThaC
D2ThaC like.author.displayName 1 Like

 @Larry I'm perplexed by your comment, but so be it. Perhaps you did not understand what I wrote, where I stated how sorry I was for the victims'  families. I'm not being glib about anything. This tragedy DID happen slightly out of view from where I live. And had I KNOWN what actually was transpiring (instead of thinking it was the usual armed suspect on the loose while helicopters hovered), I would have run over to help. 

 

The behavior I'm talking about is all related to the same "screw you" attitude that is highly popular here in Los Angeles. I don't care if it's reckless driving or improper cigarette disposal (polluting our water and/or causing massive fires). It's about extremely selfish and inconsiderate people causing problems for other people, up to and including senseless deaths.

 

No, this is not exclusive to Los Angeles. But I live here, and I'm reporting my day in and day out experience. I've traveled to many other places in this country and around the world; I can tell you that there are other places where this attitude is not nearly as bad as in LA.

 

Also, I'm going to use this comment section however I want to. Yes - I'm sounding off about an individual who, according to reports, caused a massive tragedy. And if true, he's an a--hole (IMHO) who should be held responsible. If anything good can come out of this, maybe some other a--holes will think twice about the way they go about their lives, and how it might be affecting people beyond themselves.

 

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