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Mexican Navy Sailing Ship Crashes Into Brooklyn Bridge, Killing 2 Crew Members

There were 277 people on board when the ship drifted directly into the underside of the bridge on Saturday night, the authorities said. At least 22 were injured, half of them critically.

​There were 277 people on board when the ship drifted directly into the underside of the bridge on Saturday night, the authorities said. At least 22 were injured, half of them critically.   

Several people needed help after the episode on Saturday night, the police said. There were 277 people on board, and three were critically injured.

Video
The masts of a Mexican Navy training sailboat toppled after striking the underside of the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday evening.CreditCredit…Dave Sanders for The New York Times

A Mexican Navy training sailboat with nearly 300 people on board struck the underside of the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday night, the New York Police Department said.

There were 277 people on board, a Fire Department official said. Among those injured, three were deemed to be in critical condition and another 17 were serious. Everyone on board the ship is believed to be accounted for, the official said.

The masts of the ship, which was flying a giant Mexican flag, snapped when they hit the underside of the bridge, according to video posted on social media.

The vessel lurched, but stayed upright as it came to a stop at the Brooklyn Promenade around 8:30 p.m., according to video and images from the scene. Its masts appeared to be badly damaged.

“The status of personnel and equipment is being reviewed by naval and local authorities, who are providing support,” according to a social media post written in Spanish from the Mexican secretariat of the navy.

Nick Corso, 23, was finishing dinner with friends at a restaurant by the Promenade when they saw the ship heading toward them.

He thought at first that the vessel would clear the bridge, he said, but then “the top lights on the mast disappeared behind the bridge and I was like, oh, it’s not going to make it.”

When the top of the mast hit the underside of the bridge, he said, “you could hear it snap.”

Shayla Colon and Yan Zhuang contributed reporting.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

 

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