Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Mourners packed a funeral for eight of the 20 people killed Oct. 6 in a N.Y. limo crash.

Mourners pack church to say goodbye to family

- By Michael Hill

AMSTERDAM, N.Y. — Mourners at a funeral for four sisters and their family members killed in a New York limousine crash were assured Saturday that their loved ones can still see their tears and feel their heartache.

On a damp, chilly day, hundreds of people packed the pews of an old brick church in Amsterdam at the service for eight of the 20 people killed last Saturday when the limousine they hired for a 30th birthday celebratio­n crashed. The stretch limo barreled down a hill past a stop sign into another vehicle in the parking lot. All 17 passengers and the driver were killed, as well as two pedestrian­s standing in the parking lot.

“The question that is in the hearts of so many is: Why?” The Rev. O. Robert DeMaritnis told hundreds of mourners. “Why did these 20 individual­s have to be taken from us so quickly and so unexpected­ly?”

DeMaritnis spoke on an altar flanked by pictures of Allison King, sister Abigail Jackson and her husband, Adam Jackson, sister Mary Dyson and her husband, Robert Dyson, sister Amy Steenburg and her husband, Axel Steenburg, and his older brother, Richard Steenburg.

Urns containing their remains were placed beneath the pictures, with each of the three married couples sharing urns. Five teddy bears lay by the urns, one for each young child who lost a parent.

A week ago, the group — most of them in their 30s — was headed to a birthday party for Amy Steenburg at a local brewery in Cooperstow­n. DeMaritnis said he believes Amy and her friends were able to celebrate Amy’s 30th birthday, but in their afterlife. He told mourners to take solace in their eternal life.

DeMaritnis married Amy and Axel Steenburg in June. He recalled them as a laughter-loving couple who made a sign asking wedding guests not to take pictures, because “we suggest that you live in the moment.”

He had wondered why they never picked up the sign. Now, he said, he knew.

“That’s what they’re asking me to ask you to do today,” DeMaritnis said, holding the sign aloft.

The sisters grew up in Amsterdam, a small upstate New York city, and many of the victims have deep ties to the area.

 ?? Hans Pennink The Associated Press ?? Friends and family attend a funeral Mass for eight of the 20 people killed in an Oct. 6 limousine crash in Schoharie, N.Y., Saturday at St. Stanislaus Roman Catholic Church on Saturday in Amsterdam, N.Y.
Hans Pennink The Associated Press Friends and family attend a funeral Mass for eight of the 20 people killed in an Oct. 6 limousine crash in Schoharie, N.Y., Saturday at St. Stanislaus Roman Catholic Church on Saturday in Amsterdam, N.Y.

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