SHARE

Found! Dog Who Fled Horrific Route 287 Dump Truck Rollover Turns Up The Next Day

As he recuperated in a hospital bed, a dump truck driver from Bergen County who miraculously survived a horrific crash on Route 287 worried about the fate of his dog.

A dump truck driver from Bergen County who miraculously survived a horrific crash on Route 287 spent some of his time recuperating in a hospital bed thinking he'd lost his beloved dog.

A dump truck driver from Bergen County who miraculously survived a horrific crash on Route 287 spent some of his time recuperating in a hospital bed thinking he'd lost his beloved dog.

Photo Credit: CONTRIBUTED
The frightened canine was reunited with the grateful dump truck driver from Elmwood Park.

The frightened canine was reunited with the grateful dump truck driver from Elmwood Park.

Photo Credit: CONTRIBUTED
The 29-year-old dump truck driver from Elmwood Park is loaded into an ambulance after the crash on northbound Route 287 in Mahwah.

The 29-year-old dump truck driver from Elmwood Park is loaded into an ambulance after the crash on northbound Route 287 in Mahwah.

Photo Credit: Boyd A. Loving

The pooch bolted as rescuers arrived at the scene of the noontime rollover on the northbound highway in Mahwah on Monday. No one knew where he'd gone.

Then on Tuesday, state Department of Transportation workers found the little fella sitting on the side of the road not far from the scene.

New Jersey State Police brought the dog to Hackensack University Medical Center, where preparations were already being made for 29-year-old Elmwood Park driver's release.

The Kenilworth dump truck, owned by Cahl Trucking of Elmwood Park, first hit the guardrail on the highway's left shoulder around 11 a.m., NJSP Sgt. Philip Curry said.

It then "rotated counter-clockwise and struck the guardrail again and overturned," the sereant said.

The truck landed on its roof on the median guardrail. The heavily entrapped driver's legs were pinned in the crushed cab.

It took firefighters about 90 minutes to extricate him. Fortunately, he was conscious and alert while being taken to the hospital with injuries that multiple responders agreed were miraculously not life-threatening.

The southbound lanes were eventually reopened, but northbound Route 287 remained closed for hours so heavy-duty wreckers could lift the rig onto a flatbed and remove the wreckage from the scene.

State Police were investigating the cause of the crash, Curry said.

to follow Daily Voice Rutherford and receive free news updates.

SCROLL TO NEXT ARTICLE