#Inside edition live upgrade#
But the authorities have made no plans to upgrade or widen the culvert. “Earlier, there was very little traffic on this road but over the period of time, the number of vehicles here have increased significantly. Sandesh Sharma, a resident who lives in Sector 90 and often commutes on the stretch, said the culvert is very narrow and devoid of any protective wall on its sides.
#Inside edition live driver#
He added that the driver may have lost control while trying to swerve to avoid hitting a person or another vehicle coming from the opposite side. Police are scanning CCTV footage from multiple cameras installed by private individuals and GMDA for clues, said a police officer. “Investigation is under way to find out the exact cause of the accident,” he added. Gurugram police spokesperson Subhash Boken said a case has been registered against unknown persons under IPC sections 379 (rash driving) and 304A (death in accident) at the Sector 10 police station. It was a routine trip,” Dharamvir’s uncle Sudhir Kumar said. “They had left home from Mahendergarh early on Monday and were supposed to return on Tuesday. The duo used to make frequent work-related trips to Gurugram and adjoining areas, said one of their relatives who had come to the hospital. Their bodies were handed over to their families after post-mortem. Keshav and Dharamvir were taken to Civil Hospital in Sector 10, where they were declared brought dead. A crane was deployed to pull the car out. A team from the Sector 10 police station rushed to the spot after being informed by commuters. As the car’s electronic system malfunctioned, all its doors got locked automatically, leaving the two men stuck inside. On the culvert constructed over Najafgarh drain in Gadoli village, Keshav lost control of the vehicle, following which it fell into the drain. The accident took place on the outskirts of Gadoli village around 2.30am when Keshav and Dharamvir, both contractors from Mahendergarh’s Pathera and Dhanoda villages, were travelling from Pataudi to Gurugram for work in an i20. What they really needed were decision-making classes that would enable them to not choose the wrong path repeatedly.GURUGRAM: Two youths in their mid-20s drowned after their car fell into Najafgarh drain on the main Pataudi Road in the early hours of Tuesday. The show at that point was syndicated from a magazine and became one of the largest tabloid based television shows. Specifically the larger ones that made the tabloids, or was high profile. What they really needed was help getting off drugs. 3.4 (608) Inside Edition from 1989 goes of the recent crimes, and investigations for the year. "But what they really needed were job training skills. "They'll be there for a period of time, the charges will get thrown out, and they'll never get processed through the system," she said of the women she encountered. "There was nothing happening while these women were behind bars that was going to help them make better decisions going forward," she said of her jail experience, admitting she saw "not a darn thing" being done to lower the rate of incarceration. She recalled that experience being her most memorable as a journalist, and possibly her most important. However, the circumstances involved in Norville going to jail were not typical.īack in 2000, she spent a week incarcerated in a North Carolina jail - not because she committed a crime, but for an Inside Edition segment. Read on to learn the untold truth of Deborah Norville.Ĭount Deborah Norville among the celebrities to have spent time in the slammer. Through sheer talent and tenacity, she was able to overcome the obstacles fate threw in her path, making history to become the longest-serving anchor on U.S. Yet Norville has managed to overcome the controversy and backlash that nearly derailed her broadcasting career at an age when it should have been taking off.
However, NBC's botched handling of her arrival led her tenure on the show to be short-lived, and ultimately one of the most notorious missteps network television. It didn't take Norville long to move from local to national television when she was hired by the iconic Todayshow. Her natural abilities in front of the camera did not go unnoticed, and she was subsequently tapped to be an anchor and reporter for Chicago's WMAQ-TV. According to Norville's show bio, the native of Dalton, Georgia, began her broadcasting career at Atlanta's WAGA-TV while she was still a student at the University of Georgia.
Since 1995, viewers have tuned in to watch Deborah Norville deliver a unique blend of news and entertainment as anchor of syndicated Inside Edition.