Tuesday, February 10, 2015

At Funeral Service, Tears and Laughter Celebrate the Life of Metro-North Mass Murderer Ellen Brody

Husband Hints at Lawsuit Against the Railroad His Bloody Bride Attacked; the Railroad Should Sue Him!

[Previously, at WEJB/NSU: “Metro-North Crash was a Mass Murder-Suicide, Not an Accident; ‘A Split-Second Decision’; ABC News’ Diana Williams Lied About Attack; Did She Suspect Killer Ellen Brody was a Terrorist? (Photos)”]


 

 

Murder victim Robert Dirks (Family photo)
 

Murder victim Walter Liedtke
 

Murder victim Joseph Nadol (Photo: J.P. Morgan)
 

Murder victim Aditya Tomar
 

Murder victim Eric Vandercar
 

Re-posted by Nicholas Stix

I’ve gotten a lot of love over the years from the Lubavitchers (Chabad) who, as a group, are the best Judaism has to offer. They love their fellow Jews, but this was one Jew whom no Jew with a conscience can love. We can maybe—maybe—forgive her family for being blinded by grief and love, perhaps for a week or two. However, that does not cover her husband’s suggestion that he is thinking of suing Metro-North which, if anything, should be suing him.

The funeral service should have shown pictures of Ellen Brody’s dead five murder victims, and remembered their lives.

And if any reader thinks Ellen Brody got a Jewish bonus, so that her mass murder is swept under the rug, I can assure him that if yours truly had been the killer, that it would have been reported and recorded by the authorities as a mass murder in all its evil. There may be a “rich Jew,” or a “rich female Jew” bonus, but there is definitely no “Jew bonus,” or my experience with New York City cops and prosecutors, heck, my whole life would have been very different. (Actually, in that case my life would have been immeasurably diminished, because I would have married the wrong girl, and had the wrong son!)

 

Mourners after the funeral service in Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., for Ellen Brody, who was killed when a Metro-North train struck her sport utility vehicle. Credit Karsten Moran for The New York Times
 

Ellen Brody, S.U.V. Driver in Metro-North Crash, Is Mourned
By Lisa W. Foderaro
February 6, 2015
New York Times

DOBBS FERRY, N.Y. — The woman whose sport utility vehicle was at the center of the train crash that claimed six lives, including her own, was remembered on Friday morning in a packed funeral service here for what was described as a larger-than-life personality and her devotion to family and friends.

Speculation has swirled for days around the actions of the woman, Ellen Brody, who on Tuesday night drove her Mercedes-Benz over a rail crossing in Valhalla, N.Y. At the service at Chabad of the Rivertowns, though, her family, friends and rabbi set aside the circumstances that precipitated the deadliest crash in Metro-North Railroad history and focused instead on her life.

“Her family was everything to her,” Rabbi Benjy Silverman, co-director of the synagogue, said of Ms. Brody. “She was their biggest fan and supporter. Her beautiful soul always found beauty within others. She felt a deep connection with everyone she encountered.”

Her husband, Alan, and the couple’s three daughters took turns remembering Ms. Brody, 49, who lived with her family nearby in the Edgemont section of Greenburgh, and had worked in a jewelry store in Chappaqua, N.Y. Mr. Brody touched on the accident only once at the beginning of his eulogy, saying that his wife “was taken from us in a tragedy of unimaginable proportions.”
 

Play Video|0:34
Outside Ellen Brody’s Funeral
Outside Ellen Brody’s Funeral


A friend of the woman who was killed when she drove her sport utility vehicle over a rail crossing and was hit by a Metro-North train said that if this happened to her, it “could happen to anybody.”
 

[The hell, it could! The Boss has come close to murdering me a few times, but never a bunch of strangers whom she had no reason to bear ill will.]

Video by AP on Publish Date February 6, 2015. Photo by Karsten Moran for The New York Times.

He also made a critical reference to the rail crossing where Ms. Brody drove forward into the path of an oncoming commuter train after she stopped to inspect a gate that had dropped onto her vehicle. The Brodys live in lower Westchester County, south of the crash scene, where there are fewer at-grade crossings.

“Ellen was on her way to meet a new client and somehow she wound up in a strange, unfamiliar place,” said Mr. Brody, a native of South Africa, referring to the crossing on Commerce Street, one of the streets onto which an accident on the Taconic Parkway had forced traffic on Tuesday. “I once drove there in that area and I remember thinking, ‘You know, this looks like my old home in Africa,’ ” he said. “I also remember thinking, ‘Are you kidding?’ Who could imagine that a major commuter railroad runs through this?”

At the front of the orange-brick synagogue stood an oversize head shot of Ms. Brody wearing the wide smile that several speakers said accompanied her lively, infectious personality. Mr. Brody remembered his wife’s “optimism” the last time they spoke on the phone.

“That was exactly the same spirit of the girl I met back in 1989 at a friends’ reunion in Queens,” he said, choking back tears. “Somehow, she stood out in the crowd and her youthful effervescence caught my attention. That enthusiasm, that effervescence, that exuberance, it never lacked. It never got old. It was her gift.”

 

Photo
Ms. Brody died Tuesday. Credit Family photo via Jeff Schaeffer, via Associated Press
 

He and others recalled some of her enthusiasms — dancing, comedy, matchmaking, entertaining, storytelling, networking, volunteer work and celebrating the achievements of her three daughters, Danielle, Julia and Alexa. The three girls stood at the podium together, caressing and comforting one another as they each spoke about their mother.

Again and again, Ms. Brody was recalled as warm and outgoing. Danielle, her eldest daughter, said: “She was the only person I knew who made friends every single day: on a line in the supermarket, at the bank, in the jewelry store.”

Her youngest daughter, Alexa, said her mother was selfless in tending to the three girls’ needs. “Anytime I had even the smallest thing on my mind, I knew I could come and talk to you and that you would listen,” she said.
“If I was stressed — even the slightest bit of stress — you would drop everything you were doing, staying up until 2 in the morning to find me an A.P. bio tutor.”

Ms. Brody’s middle daughter, Julia, described a close-knit family united by her parents’ love and a sense of humor. The Brodys, she said, used to joke that they would make the perfect subject for a reality TV show. “We had a name for it — the Brody Brunch,” she said. “My mom was so funny. She told the best stories. My friends probably say that I tell good stories and that I add every single detail. I learned that from my mom.”

During the service, sobs and laughter punctuated the long, detailed reminiscences from her immediate family. Rabbi Silverman focused on what Ms. Brody had achieved, rather than what she would miss.

“The family was in such a good place, and then tragedy happened,” he said. “But I think that’s the point. In the 49 years that she was alive, she got it done. She raised three special daughters and brought them to where they need to be, with a solid foundation and a beautiful future ahead of them.” He added, “She couldn’t have possibly given any more.”


A version of this article appears in print on February 7, 2015, on page A14 of the New York edition with the headline: Driver of S.U.V. in Metro-North Crash Is Mourned.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

I wonder if all was it seemed in the Brody family. If I was law enforcement, I would be observing the husband very closely. I'm assuming because she was buried within 24 hours there was no time for an alcohol/toxicology screen?

Anonymous said...

I suppose that it can be reasoned the woman was mental and had terrible issues and was suicidal.

But to take a bunch of others with you is very wrong and everyone know it.

Usually persons doing death by train sit on the tracks with their back turned to the oncoming train.

David In TN said...

Ellen Brody's family and friends seem to be saying it was an accident. The witness account indicates it was deliberate.

Objectively, it appears to be the latter.

Stan D Mute said...

It's impossible to believe a sentient human could have a gate crash down on them at a railroad crossing then proceed to PARK on the tracks until the train hits them. She was either suicidal or so stupid we are unlucky she lived long enough to breed. My bet is on the former which indeed makes her a mass murderer. Whether it's media Jews covering another Jew's homicidal shame is the question. What do we know of the reporters?

Nicholas said...

Anon I Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 9:40:00 AM EST,

Maybe I'm reading too much into this, but in the husband's eulogy (as printed elsewhere), he said some things that hinted at darkness, saying he wished he could have been there to rescue her. It sounded as though he'd "rescued" her a few times previously.

Nicholas said...

Anon II Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at 11:28:00 AM EST,

....

"But to take a bunch of others with you is very wrong and everyone know it...."

Agreed.

"Usually persons doing death by train sit on the tracks with their back turned to the oncoming train."

Yup. Then only one peson is harmed.

Nicholas said...

David,

A commenter at the Daily Mail said that friends need to shut up, and grieve in in private. Another commenter pointed out that since where she lived, everyone drives his own car, they would have no idea whether she was the "careful" driver they all claimed she was. In nay event, she obviously wasn't a careful driver, so all the friends have is show that they cared about her, and in their caring, are willing to lie on her behalf.

Nicholas said...

Stan,

There's no clear profile of the reporters. Foderaro is an Italian name, and it's her maiden name, although when I met her 29 years ago, she acted like a JAP. However, certain behaviors are no longer uniquely Jewish.

Sam Tanenhaus, a Timesman who provided an even worse cover story for the killer in the New Yorker, is a Jew.

So, the religious angle provides no clear answers.