Oct 162012
 

Image source: shinya via Flickr.

A man survived an attempted suicide jump off the Verrazano Bridge late Sunday afternoon, according to a U.S. Coast Guard spokesperson.

“He was in critical condition but alive,” Coast Guard spokesman Charles Rowe told reporter Jillian Jorgensen from Staten Island Advance.

NYPD Harbor Unit officers pulled the man from the 62 degree water between Staten Island and Brooklyn.

An MTA spokesperson also confirmed with reporters that the jumper had been fished out of the Narrows alive. From the Coast Guard station, the man was taken to Staten Island University Hospital, Ocean Breeze.

The man had first been spotted at 5:26 p.m., an NYPD spokesman told the Advance, when he was seen getting out of a parked vehicle on the span’s Upper Level before jumping. NYPD Harbor and Aviation units then began to search the water to find him, the spokesman said.

As part of what has been described since earlier this year as an alarming trend, the Advance writes that there has been five suicides, including at least three thwarted attempts, since December 2011.

Jun 082012
 

The above picture shows a man sitting at the top of a staircase that leads down into the 95th Street R Train Station, reading the paper, and possibly listening to what looks like an old transistor radio.

For this shot, Bath Beach photographer David Tan used a Konica Autoreflex T3 with Kodak Ektar 100 film. It was taken on April 25, 2012.

To see more of David’s excellent images, please visit his blog at dtan.blogspot.com.

If you have photos you’d like us to publish as part of the Seen In Bay Ridge photo series, please send them to info@bayridgeodyssey.com. Be sure to let us know where the picture was taken and when, and how to credit the photo (i.e. by your real name, pen name, anonymously, etc.).

May 222012
 

Image source: DVIDSHUN via Flickr

Yesterday afternoon U.S. Coast Guard officials announced the end of a search for a man last seen jumping from the 69th Street Pier.

According to the Associated Press via the Wall Street Journal, the Coast Guard suspended the search and rescue operation at 4 p.m. yesterday – after covering a 50 square mile radius over 12 hours. Continue reading »