Authorities on Tuesday identified the woman who was hit and killed by a light-rail train over the weekend when she crossed the tracks in Minneapolis while wearing headphones.
Shana G. Buchanan, 42, an attorney who lived a few blocks from the scene, was struck about 10:15 a.m. Sunday near the Westgate station, near the border between Minneapolis and St. Paul, according to the Hennepin County medical examinerâs office.
While itâs clear that Buchanan suffered extensive injuries when she was hit and quickly declared dead at the scene, the examinerâs office said the cause and manner of her death âare pending at this time.â
Metro Transit Police are leading the investigation into the circumstances of her death.
Buchanan practiced law independently in various areas including criminal defense, said her father, Tom Lohse. She also taught for a time at the elementary school level in the Minneapolis school district, he said.
Buchananâs law license was on âdisability inactive status,â stemming from a finding in October 2012 by the Office of Lawyers Professional Responsibility that she was having serious mental health issues.
âShe was over Saturday night and talked to us,â said Lohse, who lives in the St. Anthony Park neighborhood of St. Paul. âEverything was great.â
Among her survivors is a 14-year-old son. Lohse said Buchananâs death has been âbeyond toughâ for the son.
âYou have no idea how tough until it happens,â the father added. âWeâre just devastated.â
Buchanan received her law degree from the William Mitchell College of Law and her undergraduate degree from the University of Minnesota, Lohse said. She graduated high school from St. Paul Central.
Lohse said his daughter made a habit of wearing headphones connected to her cellphone and was a regular user of the Green Line.
Jill Janovitz, who was on the train that struck Buchanan, said she saw emergency responders âpry her cellphone or (some) other small device out of her hands.â
Transit official Bruce Howard said Buchanan walked up the concrete ramp to the station and tried to cross the tracks at the stationâs crosswalk. But despite the flashing red warning lights, a flashing sign and bells, she stepped directly into the path of the eastbound Green Line train.
Howard said that Metro Transit cautions its riders to avoid wearing headphones, talking on cellphones or texting while around trains.
The most recent fatality, on the Hiawatha Avenue Blue Line, was June 20 at the intersection of East 35th Street in Minneapolis. Transit officials said then that 11 people had been killed by light-rail trains since they began running in Minneapolis a decade ago. Most were pedestrians; a few involved people who drove around lowered stop-arms and tried to beat the trains across the tracks.
Sundayâs incident was the first fatality on the Green Line light rail route since it began operating on June 14. Howard said there have been 13 âminorâ incidents on the route.
Woman fatally struck by Green Line train was Minneapolis attorney
Authorities on Tuesday identified the woman who was hit and killed by a light-rail train over the weekend when she crossed the tracks in Minneapolis while wearing headphones.
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