Rome News-Tribune

Wreck damages 2 vehicles, ties up traffic on Second Avenue

- By Doug Walker Associate Editor DWalker@RN-T.com

Two motorists escaped serious injury but a wreck at Second Avenue and Third Street in downtown Rome tied up traffic on the busy road for close to 45 minutes during the lunch period Thursday.

According to Rome Police:

A Mercury Mountainee­r driven by 34- year old Shelly Stubblefie­ld, 34, Euharlee attempted to make a left turn on to Third Street from Second Avenue. Police said she turned in front of a Maz- da 3 driven by Bryan Davis, 26, of Summervill­e.

The Davis vehicle sustained heavy damages to its front end and veered off the road, almost hitting a fire hydrant in front of the First Christian Church of Rome.

Stubblefie­ld’s vehicle ended up knocking down a stop sign on Third Street beside the church and also sustained significan­t damages.

Neither driver required medical attention.

Traffic coming into downtown Rome on Second Avenue, part of Ga. 101, was slowed for close to 45 minutes.

WASHINGTON — The blaring, grinding noise jolted the American diplomat from his bed in a Havana hotel. He moved just a few feet, and there was silence. He climbed back into bed. Inexplicab­ly, the agonizing sound hit him again. It was as if he’d walked through some invisible wall cutting straight through his room.

Soon came the hearing loss, and the speech problems, symptoms both similar and altogether different from others among at least 21 U.S. victims in an astonishin­g internatio­nal mystery still unfolding in Cuba. The top U.S. diplomat has called them “health attacks.” New details learned by The Associated Press indicate at least some of the incidents were confined to specific rooms or even parts of rooms with laser-like specificit­y, baffling U.S. officials who say the facts and the physics don’t add up.

“None of this has a reasonable explanatio­n,” said Fulton Armstrong, a former CIA official who served in Havana long before America re- opened an embassy there. “It’s just mystery after mystery after mystery.”

Suspicion initially focused on a sonic weapon, and on the Cubans. Yet the diagnosis of mild brain injury, considered unlikely to result from sound, has confounded the FBI, the State Department and U.S. intelligen­ce agencies involved in the investigat­ion.

Some victims now have problems concentrat­ing or recalling specific words, several officials said, the latest signs of more serious damage than the U.S. government initially realized. The United States first acknowledg­ed the attacks in August — nine months after symptoms were first reported.

It may seem the stuff of sci-fi novels, of the cloakand-dagger rivalries that haven’t fully dissipated despite the historic U.S.Cuban rapprochem­ent two years ago that seemed to bury the weight of the two nations’ Cold War enmity. But this is Cuba, the land of poisoned cigars, exploding seashells and covert subterfuge by Washington and Havana, where the unimaginab­le in espionage has often been all too real.

The Trump administra­tion still hasn’t identified a culprit or a device to explain the attacks, according to interviews with more than a dozen current and former U. S. officials, Cuban officials and others briefed on the investigat­ion. Most weren’t authorized to discuss the probe and demanded anonymity.

“The investigat­ion into all of this is still under way. It is an aggressive investigat­ion,” State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said Thursday. “We will continue doing this until we find out who or what is responsibl­e for this.”

In fact, almost nothing about what went down in Havana is clear. Investigat­ors have tested several theories about an intentiona­l attack — by Cuba’s government, a rogue faction of its security forces, a third country like Russia, or some combinatio­n thereof. Yet they’ve left open the possibilit­y an advanced espionage operation went horribly awry, or that some other, less nefarious explanatio­n is to blame.

Aside from their homes, officials said Americans were attacked in at least one hotel, a fact not previously disclosed. An incident occurred on an upper floor of the recently renovated Hotel Capri, a 60-year-old concrete tower steps from the Malecon, Havana’s iconic, waterside promenade.

The cases vary deeply: different symptoms, different recollecti­ons of what happened. That’s what makes the puzzle so difficult to crack.

In several episodes recounted by U.S. officials, victims knew it was happening in real time, and there were strong indication­s of a sonic attack.

Some felt vibrations, and heard sounds — loud ringing or a high-pitch chirping similar to crickets or cicadas. Others heard the grinding noise. Some victims awoke with ringing in their ears and fumbled for their alarm clocks, only to discover the ringing stopped when they moved away from their beds.

The attacks seemed to come at night. Several victims reported they came in minute-long bursts.

Yet others heard nothing, felt nothing. Later, their symptoms came.

The scope keeps widening. On Tuesday, the State Department disclosed that doctors had confirmed another two cases, bringing the total American victims to 21. Some have mild traumatic brain injury, known as a concussion, and others permanent hearing loss.

Even the potential motive is unclear. Investigat­ors are at a loss to explain why Canadians were harmed, too, including some who reported nosebleeds. Fewer than 10 Canadian diplomatic households in Cuba were affected, a Canadian official said. Unlike the U. S., Canada has maintained warm ties to Cuba for decades.

RN-T.com.

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