The 50-year-old man succumbed to his injuries around 1 am yesterday at Vassar Brothers Medical Center, according to Tim Massie, a senior vice president at hospital operator Health Quest. The victim's name wasn't immediately released as the hospital and authorities worked to locate his family.
Four additional people were injured yesterday in a separate lightning strike in the resort town of Lake George, north of Albany, state police said. Few details about the Lake George strike were available.
Emergency responders found three people unresponsive, two others conscious but injured, and some belongings on fire.
Two 46-year-old men remained in intensive care yesterday at the Vassar hospital with burns and internal injuries, Massie said. He said one of the victims was doing well enough that he could be moved from intensive care within about two days, while the other was more gravely hurt and would likely remain longer in the ICU.
The bolt hit two days after a man and a woman were killed by an apparent lightning strike in a western New York cemetery.
But such deaths, overall, are rare. While lightning strikes the United States about 25 million times a year, it kills an average of 49 people annually, injuring hundreds more, according to the National Weather Service.
Before Friday, 25 people had died of lightning strikes nationwide so far this year, in circumstances ranging from watching a music festival to walking to their cars. Florida has seen more lightning fatalities six than any other state this year.
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