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Bad cell service cited in elderly NY couple death

9 attempts to make cell phone call for help, woman’s search for neighbor were fruitless

The Buffalo News

ANDES, N.Y. — An elderly Manhattan couple whose car became stuck near their wooded Catskills vacation home died after nine fruitless attempts to make a cellphone call for help and after the woman searched in vain for a neighbor.

Arthur Morris, 88, slid their car down an embankment 60 feet from their vacation home on May 3 in Andes, about 115 miles northwest of New York City, according to state police and relatives.

Family members said Friday that Morris tried to get out but became wedged between the tilted car and the ground and was asphyxiated. His wife, Madeleine, 89, walked with her cane to an empty neighbor’s house and died of exposure after a rainy night sheltering under a tarp on the patio. Her family didn’t know whether she also had tried walking home.

“She walked a quarter-mile to the neighbor’s house and there was no one there,” Madeleine’s grandson Jeantet Fields told the New York Daily News, which first reported the story. “It was a vacation house and they had left the day before.”

Cell service is spotty in the rural area and calls made by the couple to 911, Madeleine’s son and a neighbor did not go through.

Hunters found the husband’s body the next day and searchers soon after found the wife’s body on a neighbor’s patio, according to police.

The low temperature would have been about 48 degrees May 3 and it was raining, the National Weather Service in Binghamton said.

Arthur was a Juilliard-educated music teacher who had heart disease and a hernia. Madeleine was a retired professor who survived the Nazi occupation in France and had two knee replacements, the Daily News reported.

“What really has me choked up the most is the circumstances they died in,” Fields said. “Given the lives they lived, they should have had a better way out than that.”

Fields said the family agreed to share the story of his parents’ deaths out of concern for others who may be put at risk by gaps in cellphone coverage.

“If some good can come out of her death, that will be something else she contributed to the world,” he said of his mother.

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