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Malibu Man Killed In PCH/Kanan Crash

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  • Malibu Man Killed In PCH/Kanan Crash

    MALIBU MAN KILLED IN PCH/KANAN CRASH
    By Jonathan Friedman / Assistant Editor

    Malibu Times, CA
    Nov 1 2007

    William H. Weissberg, a 58-year-old Malibu attorney, was killed last
    Wednesday when a 16-wheeler double-trailer dump truck driven by
    Hovik Oganes Papikyan lost control on Kanan Dume Road and slammed
    into his car while he was heading east on Pacific Coast Highway. A
    sports utility vehicle driven by Los Angeles County Fire Department
    engineer Dave Weiss was also hit. Weissberg's gas tank exploded,
    creating a large fire.

    Weissberg and Papikyan were killed instantly. Weiss suffered a
    broken ankle and fractured rib. The ingestion of smoke also caused
    pneumonia and blurred vision. He will not be able to work for at
    least two months.

    Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department and fire officials said
    Papikyan lost control of his truck, which was full of gravel, while
    heading toward Pacific Coast Highway on Kanan at about 9:50 a.m. He
    did not use the three-foot-deep, graveled escape median. The truck,
    traveling an estimated 70 mph, slammed into Weissberg's Mercedes-Benz
    as it crossed the light, which had just turned green, on Pacific
    Coast Highway and both vehicles flew into an embankment along with
    Weiss' SUV.

    Oxnard resident Kirk Prouse, who was in a car behind the Mercedes,
    said, "It all happened so fast... then I saw an explosion ... I
    would've been the next person."

    Weiss, who works at Fire Station No. 68 in Calabasas and had been
    working the Canyon Fire, was on his day off and had been surfing. He
    was heading home when his car was hit. As Sheriff's deputies Chris
    Chavez and Ed Harrold rescued Weiss from his vehicle, a man from Waste
    Management Inc., who was driving behind Weiss' SUV, got out of his
    vehicle and put out the fire with an extinguisher he had in his truck.

    Fire Capt. Bob Goldman of Station 70, who arrived at the scene and is
    Weiss' friend, said of the Waste Management worker, "I am absolutely
    grateful to him, and to the deputies."

    Officials said Weiss would have died if they did not stop the fire
    and get him out of the vehicle.

    Trucks weighing more than 8,000 pounds and those with trailers
    are not allowed to travel on Kanan. Papikyan's truck violated both
    those rules. Sgt. Brooks, the head traffic officer at Malibu/Lost
    Hills Sheriff's Station, said Papikyan was supposed to be driving
    on Malibu Canyon Road to access a delivery point near Zuma Beach,
    but that road was closed because of the Canyon Fire.

    Brooks said had Papikyan driven into the safety median, which contains
    a sinking gravel material, his truck would have sunk, and not reached
    Pacific Coast Highway.

    "There's no question that would have happened," Brooks said. "You
    just can't get through that stuff."

    Brooks said Papikyan also attempted to make a right turn on Pacific
    Coast highway as he flew down Kanan, which Brooks said led to his
    truck slamming into the two vehicles.

    This is not the first time that a truck driver has lost control on
    Kanan, leading to deaths. Some City Councilmembers at a meeting last
    Friday suggested more warning signs should be added to the road,
    including ones in Spanish or with pictures. Brooks said this would
    not help, and said Papikyan was Armenian and knew English.

    "There are 21 signs between Agoura and PCH telling about the
    restriction, the (8 percent) grade, a brake check area and finally
    the escape median," Brooks said.

    He continued, "You can't keep people from killing themselves if they
    ignore the rules of the road."

    Brooks said there was no reason to make signs in Spanish because one
    needs to be able to read English to get a truck driver's license.

    Kanan is under the jurisdiction of Malibu/Lost Hills deputies between
    Pacific Coast Highway and a one-mile stretch to the north. After that,
    it is patrolled by California Highway Patrol officers. Brooks said
    CHP officers frequently cite truck drivers for using the road.

    And he says Sheriff's deputies have an increased presence in the area,
    stopping trucks when they see them.

    But Malibu Park resident Susan Tellem, who said a friend of hers was
    killed at the Kanan/Pacific Coast Highway intersection under similar
    circumstances, said that enforcement is not good enough.

    "It is shameful, that this issue hasn't been dealt with," Tellem
    said. "I see trucks on Kanan Dume all the time, and officials need
    to be very aggressive about stopping this."

    http://www.malibutimes.com/articles/2 007/10/31/news/news3.txt
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