Woman dies getting stuck clothing drop box

By ASSOCIATED PRESS and JESSICA CHIA FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

Woman is found dead from hypothermia and dangling from clothing donation drop-off bin after getting her arm stuck in the shutter while removing bags of clothes at 2am

  • Judith Permar, 56, was dropping clothes off at a collection bin at 2am on Sunday
  • Stool she was using to reach the opening collapsed underneath her, leaving her danging by the arm, which was firmly lodged in the bin
  • Permar was found dead at 8.30am and the coroner ruled her death an accident
  • Autopsy reveals her arm and wrist were broken, and she died from hypothermia
  • Police chief Brian Hollenbush said she was trying to extract bags of clothes and shoes from the bin and her Hummer was parked nearby with engine still running.

A Pennsylvania woman whose arm got caught in a clothing donation drop-off bin was found dead after she was left dangling for more than six hours through the night, an autopsy revealed.

Judith Permar, 56, of Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania, was found dead at 8.30am Sunday after her arm got lodged in a collection bin when the step stool she was using collapsed underneath her.

Pemar was fishing bags out of the bin, some of which were found littering the ground, Chief Brian Hollenbush told Philly.com.

Permar was pulling bags out of the collection bin along Route 54 in Natalie, a tiny village about 60 miles northeast of Harrisburg, Hollenbush said.

The 56-year-old woman who is described as short, brought her own stool to reach the opening on Sunday morning, the coroner said.

The stool collapsed and Permar's arm got stuck at around 2am on Sunday, and an autopsy on Monday revealed Permar's left arm and wrist were broken.

She was unable to free herself, and the 56-year-old was found dead at the bin around 8.30am.

'She was fishing bags out and the ladder she was standing on gave way and she couldn't get her hand loose,' Hollenbush said.

Bags filled with clothes and shoes littered the ground and her Hummer was parked nearby with the engine still running, he said.

The police had received reports in November of a woman with a black Hummer who was removing bags from the bin, he added.

Permar leaves behind her husband, three sons, one daughter and four grandchildren.

Her daughter Angela Minnig wrote a tribute on Facebook that read: 'On Sunday morning my Mother passed away. It was very sudden and our family will learn to cope with the loss of such an amazing Wife, Mother, Sister, and Friend.

'She was such a fun loving person and we know it would mean the world to her to say "See you Again."

She was described as an active and energetic woman who adored cats and enjoyed cooking, baking and gardening, according to her obituary.

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