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May 5, 2024

Death reported from California earthquake

California Earthquake

Eric Risberg / AP

Bricks and fallen rubble cover a car with the old courthouse in the background after an earthquake Sunday, Aug. 24, 2014, in Napa, Calif. A large earthquake rolled through California’s northern Bay Area early Sunday, damaging buildings, igniting fires, knocking out power to tens of thousands and sending residents running from their homes in the darkness.

Updated Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2014 | 12:03 p.m.

Aug. 24 California Earthquake

Winemaker Tom Montgomery stands in wine and reacts to seeing damage following an earthquake at the B.R. Cohn Winery barrel storage facility Sunday, Aug. 24, 2014, in Napa, Calif. Winemakers in California’s storied Napa Valley woke up to thousands of broken bottles, barrels and gallons of ruined wine as a result of Sunday’s earthquake. (AP Photo/ Launch slideshow »

SAN FRANCISCO — A 65-year-old woman who suffered a head injury when a television struck her during last month's earthquake in California's wine country has died — the first death attributed to the magnitude-6.0 temblor, sheriff's officials said.

Laurie Anne Thompson was at her Napa home during the Aug. 24 quake when she was hit, according to the Napa County Sheriff's Office. She did not go to the hospital until the next day when she felt dizzy and experienced a decline in mental function.

Sheriff's officials said she died Friday at a hospital of an intracranial hemorrhage.

"Her condition continued to deteriorate over time and, unfortunately, she passed away," Sheriff's Capt. Doug Pike said.

The earthquake has not claimed any other lives, but left scores of people injured, among them a 13-year-old boy who broke his pelvis in several places when part of a chimney collapsed on him.

It was the strongest quake to hit the San Francisco Bay area since a magnitude-6.9 quake in 1989.

The temblor was centered near the city of Napa and broke water mains and gas lines and sparked gas-fed fires that destroyed several mobile homes. The worst damage and disruption was confined to downtown Napa, where a post office, library and a 141-room hotel were among 150 homes and buildings deemed unsafe to occupy.

The county's famed wineries also suffered damage, with oak wine barrels weighing more than a quarter-ton and stacked high cascading down.

A survey commissioned by the Napa Valley Vintners Association and Napa County and presented to the county on Tuesday estimated that 60 percent of Napa wineries suffered some damage, with as much as 25 percent suffering moderate to severe damage exceeding $50,000 per winery. The most devastated winery suffered $8 million in damage, according to the survey by Silicon Valley Bank's Wine Division. The winery is not identified.

The wine business and associated tourist crowds represent the bulk of Napa County's economy. Visit Napa Valley estimates that 3 million tourists spend $1.4 billion a year within the county. The Napa Valley Vintners trade association says the industry generates more than $13 billion of economic activity each year, including 46,000 local jobs.

Silicon Valley Bank estimated the damage to the county's wine industry at between $70 million and $100 million.

Napa County has estimated overall damage from the quake at more than $400 million.

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