LAX VICTIM’S FAMILY DEALT 2ND BLOW
LOS ANGELES TIMES – NOVEMBER 27, 2002
A brother of ticket agent killed in July 4 shootings at airport
dies after an auto accident in Chatsworth.
By Wendy Thermos
For the second time in five months, tragedy has stuck the
Chatsworth couple who lost a daughter in the July 4 shooting
spree at Los Angeles International Airport.
Nimrod Hen, the 18-year-old brother of slain ticket agent
Victoria Hen, died Tuesday of injuries suffered in a Nov. 16 car
accident that is still under investigation.
The teenager’s parents, Avi and Rachel Hen, “are in deep
sorrow” after losing two of their three children and do not
wish to discuss the devastating loss they feel,” said family
attorney Steve Solomon. “It’s just a horrible thing for
them.” The family has one other child, a son, Udi, who is in
his early 20’s.
Victoria Hen, 25, was one of two people slain by Hesham Mohamed
Hadayett, 41, an Egyptian immigrant, in a shooting rampage at
the ticket counter of El Al Israel Airlines in the summer. U.S.
authorities theorized it was an irrational act of anger, while
Israeli officials have labeled it a terroristic attack.
Victoria Hen, who lived at home with her parents, was the eldest
child. She had worked for El Al for almost two months when she
was killed.
Now police and the family are appealing for help in determining
the circumstances of the crash that killed one of her brothers.
“This is just inconceivable that you could lose both a son and
a daughter to separate tragedies,” said Los Angeles Police
Department Capt. Greg Meyer. “We are united in our commitment
to resole this case.”
Officer Toni Wolfe, who is in charge of the investigation, said
detectives want to talk to the driver who allegedly pulled out
of a driveway of a shopping complex on Madison Avenue near
Devonshire Street in Chatsworth and caused Hen to lose control
of his vehicle.
“At this point we’re not even considering pressing
charges,” Wolfe said. Basically all we want this person to do
is to come in so we can interview him or her.”
Investigators have not determined how fast Hen or the other car
was traveling at the time of the crash. The posted speed limit
is 35.
Hen was driving a Ford Mustang north on Mason about 4:30 p.m.
when a sedan, described as a silver or gold Buick or Toyota,
turned onto the street from a shopping center parking lot,
police said.
Hen missed the car but swerved across oncoming lanes and
crashed into two parked vehicles and a fire hydrant. The driver
of the sedan did not return to the scene, witnesses said.
The motorist may not have known that a crash occurred, Wolfe
said. California law requires any driver whose actions result in
an accident to stop, exchange information and render aid.
If investigators determine that the motorist saw the crash and
then left the scene, he or she could be charged with felony
manslaughter, police said.
Hen suffered severe injuries including crushes legs, but was
alert and talking to family members immediately after the crash,
officials said. He was taken to Kaiser Permanente Hospital in
Woodland Hills, but his condition quickly deteriorated.
Thursday, he was declared brain dead, said Linda Quon, a
spokeswoman for the hospital. his death may have been caused by
a fat emboli, a condition similar to a blood clot that sometimes
occurs with serious injuries, officials said. An autopsy is
underway to determine the cause of death.
His passenger, Rashid Rashid, 18, of Chatsworth was recovering
at home from cuts and bruises.
The Hens emigrated from Israel in 1990 and settled in the San
Fernando Valley. Avi Hen built up a small, family-run automotive
parts supply business in the Canoga Park area. Nimrod Hen lived
with his parents and graduated in June from Chatsworth High
School, where he was a popular student who assisted in the
dean’s office.
“He was very friendly, very outgoing, very well-liked by all
his peers,” said a school secretary. “He knew everyone in
the offices here. As soon as he walked in, he would light up and
say, ‘Hey, how you doing?”
“Right now the family has nothing to say,” family spokesman
Joseph Knoller said by telephone from their Chatsworth home.
“What can I tell you except that it’s a terrible tragedy?”
Times staff writer Patricia Ward Biederman and David Pierson
contributed to this report.
Solomon Saltsman & Jamieson are
attorneys practicing in the areas of ABC law, ABC Appeals Board
cases, and all related Land Use Matters such as City and County
Conditional Land Use Permits, Variances, Police and Fire
Permits, Entertainment Law, Gaming Law, as well as Personal
Injury litigation. Solomon Saltsman & Jamieson can be
contacted at 800-405-4222.
|