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  • 16
    Aug
    2012
    5:24am, EDT

    NZ skydiver survives harrowing plunge to ground after parachute fails

    By Daniel Strieff, NBC News

    A skydiver in New Zealand suffered serious injuries Thursday when he plunged toward the ground after the steering on his main parachute failed, forcing him to "cut away" and turn to his reserve parachute, which only partially worked, police said.

    The 35-year-old man, whose furious descent was only slowed when his reserve chute finally opened 750 feet above the ground, landed so hard that he bounced, The Associated Press reported.


    "He came down fast and hit the ground full blast,'' the New Zealand news website Stuff.co.nz quoted a witness as saying.

    The man, who was not named, was hospitalized with multiple injuries, including to his back, after the incident at the Motueka aerodrome on the country's South Island, Detective John Nicholls of the Motueka Police said in a statement.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    He was being treated in the nearby city of Nelson, the statement said. His injuries were not believed to be life threatening.

    Seasoned skydiver
    The injured man is a skydiving veteran, with more than 1,000 dives to his credit, the Otago (Dunedin, New Zealand) Daily Times reported.

    From 2007: Man survives 2-mile fall in skydiving miracle

    He had jumped from 13,000 feet and deployed his main parachute at 4,000 feet, Stuart Bean, the owner of Skydive Abel Tasman, told Stuff.co.nz.

    Bean told the Daily Times that the man's main parachute failed to work properly due to a "steering fault."

    The man's initial freefall was "uneventful," Bean said. But when his parachute opened he was unable to steer it, forcing him to "cut away" and turn to his reserve chute, he told the newspaper.

    Skydiver, 81, who survived mishap: 'Knitting is boring'

    The reserve parachute only opened 750 feet above the ground, causing the man to land heavily, Bean told the Daily Times.

    The skydiver was "going faster than you would like" when he hit the ground, Bean told Stuff.co.nz. Reports said the man remained conscious throughout the ordeal.

    Eighty-one-year-old Laverne Everett tells TODAY's Matt Lauer about her near-deadly skydiving incident, during which she began to fall out of her harness. The mishap was caught on camera and has gone viral online.

    The company said it would carry out an investigation into the parachute's failure.

    Complete world news coverage from NBCNews.com

    The injured skydiver hails from the North Island town of Taupo, according to local media reports.

    The accident occurred during the 11th annual Good Vibes skydiving festival, according to New Zealand's One News.

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    43 comments

    NZ skydiver hits ground after parachute fails Who'd of thought?!

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    Explore related topics: new-zealand, skydiving, featured, parachute
  • 4
    Jun
    2012
    5:14am, EDT

    US ambassador marks D-Day with Normandy parachute jump

    Charly Triballeau / AFP - Getty Images

    U.S. Ambassador to France, Charles Rivkin (C) stands after jumping over Sainte-Mere-Eglise, Normandy, western France, on Sunday, during the ceremonies of the the D-Day's 66th anniversary.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    U.S. Ambassador to France Charles Rivkin took part in a mass parachute jump over the coast of Normandy on Sunday to mark the 68th anniversary of the Allied invasion of mainland Europe in World War Two.

    Rivkin, 60, posted a picture of himself in flight on Twitter, along with the comment: "Proud to be the first US Ambassador to France to jump out of an airplane in honor of our troops."


    Thousands of U.S. and other Allied paratroopers began the assault on German coastal defenses with a dangerous night jump behind enemy lines early on June 6, 1944.  

    US Army photo via Twitter feed @AmbRivkin

    US Ambassador to France, Charles Rivkin, making his parachute jump over Normandy on Sunday, according to his official Twitter feed.

    Following in the footsteps of Allied paratroopers who parachuted into German-occupied Normandy hours before the seaborne assault on the beaches, Rivkin made the leap despite strong winds which resulted in light injuries to six fellow jumpers, France 3 television reported. Two of the jumpers ended up in trees, France's English-language newspaper The Connexion reported. 

    U.S., French and German paratroopers took part in the jump, Reuters reported.

    "France has been our ally from the start and the evidence is here in this field," Rivkin told TF1 television after landing. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    It was Rivkin's first jump, The Connexion reported.  The event had been planned for 450 parachutists to take part but high-winds meant that number was cut to 150, the newspaper added. 

    Rivkin, the son of an ambassador himself, is the former president of The Jim Henson Company, makers of The Muppets, according to the U.S. Embassy in France. 

    Msnbc.com staff and Reuters contributed to this report.


     

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    48 comments

    My father landed on Omaha Beach in the first wave as a platoon commander in the 29th division. He was shot twice and continued on up to the top of the hills at Veirville Sur Mer despite this. Any gesture, no matter how small or seemingly insignificant, is a welcome THANK YOU to all of them. We went  …

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    Explore related topics: france, ambassador, muppets, featured, parachute, normandy, rivkin

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