Crime & Safety
10 Have Now Jumped To Their Deaths From GWB In 2015
The latest incident happened on Friday, when a woman jumped to her death off the George Washington Bridge.

The number of people who have jumped to their deaths has now reached an unfortunate milestone.
Ten people have leaped to their deaths from the bridge this year, with the latest happening Friday when a woman jumped off the span, police said.
A bicyclist reported seeing the woman jump from the New Jersey side of the George Washington Bridge at about 5:40 a.m. Emergency responders discovered her near the Edgewater Dock in New Jersey about an hour later, according to The New York Daily News.
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The woman was not carrying identification, but authorities believed her to have been in her 40s, according to the report.
In addition to the 10 bridge deaths, Port Authority police have stopped 26 people from jumping from the George Washington Bridge, according to Cliffview Pilot.
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Nine reports of jumpers also proved unfounded, according to the report.
The Port Authority says there were 16 suicides in 2013 and 18 in 2014. Records were not kept of the number of suicides before then, according to nj.com.
The Port Authority says it plans to install a suicide-prevention fence on the George Washington Bridge by 2024, and also take some interim steps that officials say will help save lives, according to the report.
The Port Authority said the cost of the project is $35 million to $50 million, and involves a “delicate balancing” act of engineering to insure that the structure is strong, according to the report.
The Port Authority said steps taken last year to prevent bridge jumpers, including walking patrols, have proven effective, demonstrated by the 74 successful interventions in suicide attempts in 2014, according to the report.
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