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85 injured, 2 critical, in New York ferry accident

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A high-speed ferry loaded with hundreds of commuters from New Jersey crashed into a dock near Wall Street in lower Manhattan, New York on Wednesday, January 9, 2013, during the morning rush hour, injuring 57 people. (Photo by Shen Hong/Xinhua via Zuma Press/MCT)

(MCT) — NEW YORK — A high-speed commuter ferry carrying more than 300 people slammed into a boat slip in lower Manhattan during the morning rush Wednesday, injuring at least 85 passengers, including two critically.

Riders on the Seastreak Wall Street, traveling from Atlantic Highlands, N.J., to Manhattan, described a jolt, bodies falling and flying across each other, broken windows and blood. Electronic devices, coffee cups and other items were tossed around the ferry’s interior.

The National Transportation Safety Board team will spend the next five to seven days investigating the crash, interviewing crew members, looking into whether the company complied with regulations and checking for any human error, board member Robert L. Sumwalt said.

Breath alcohol tests of the captain and crew were negative, James Barker Jr., president of Seastreak, said.

Sumwalt said he believed the boat does not have a voice and data recorder, but its “sophisticated electronics” may allow investigators to retrieve data, such as the boat’s speed. Investigators also will look at whether the vessel’s propulsion system, retrofitted about a year ago, played a role in the accident.

Firefighters and emergency personnel treated dozens of bloodied and dazed passengers after the 8:43 a.m. EST crash, placing them on stretchers spread along a dock near the South Street Seaport. Many reported head injuries from being thrown about the boat, which hit the dock at a speed estimated to be about 12 miles per hour.

Passenger Brett Cebulash, 50, of Sandy Hook, N.J., was on the top level of the boat when it bounced against the dock, the impact causing a man sitting across from him to fly “from his seat and … (land) on my lap,” he said.

The New York City Office of Emergency Management on Wednesday night reported a total of 85 people injured in the crash, including 57 treated or transported to hospitals by the FDNY. Eleven people were seriously hurt, but none of the injuries was life-threatening, fire officials said. One of the critically injured passengers was taken to NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and the other to New York Downtown Hospital, officials said without identifying the passengers.

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