db44
Nov 24th, 2006, 12:00 PM
I only found out about this woman's track record this week when I got home. You wanna talk about somebody up there not liking you?
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/461342p-388059c.html
Cory Lidle's doomed plane didn't just crash into anybody's apartment.
It exploded into the empty bedroom of Kathleen Caronna, the Manhattan woman who was critically injured when a balloon knocked part of a lamppost onto her head during the 1997 Thanksgiving Day Parade.
The plane's engine was found only feet away from where Caronna sleeps, her relatives told the Daily News yesterday.
"She lost her whole bedroom," said a family member, who asked not to be identified. "Everything's devastated. ... She's got nowhere to go."
Caronna was on her way home Wednesday when the plane crashed into the Belaire at 2:42p.m. She was extremely shaken after the disaster, telling loved ones she would have been home if the plane had crashed only a few minutes later.
Her sister-in-law, Lisa Brown, 43, called Caronna's situation "unbelievable."
"How do you go through two major things like this?" Brown asked. "It's spooky. It's very spooky."
Caronna was a 33-year-old investment analyst in 1997 when she was critically injured at the Thanksgiving Day parade.
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/461342p-388059c.html
Cory Lidle's doomed plane didn't just crash into anybody's apartment.
It exploded into the empty bedroom of Kathleen Caronna, the Manhattan woman who was critically injured when a balloon knocked part of a lamppost onto her head during the 1997 Thanksgiving Day Parade.
The plane's engine was found only feet away from where Caronna sleeps, her relatives told the Daily News yesterday.
"She lost her whole bedroom," said a family member, who asked not to be identified. "Everything's devastated. ... She's got nowhere to go."
Caronna was on her way home Wednesday when the plane crashed into the Belaire at 2:42p.m. She was extremely shaken after the disaster, telling loved ones she would have been home if the plane had crashed only a few minutes later.
Her sister-in-law, Lisa Brown, 43, called Caronna's situation "unbelievable."
"How do you go through two major things like this?" Brown asked. "It's spooky. It's very spooky."
Caronna was a 33-year-old investment analyst in 1997 when she was critically injured at the Thanksgiving Day parade.