Crash Count for Manhattan CB64
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 573
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 334
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 105
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 12
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 2
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025
Carnage in CB 164
Killed 2
Crush Injuries 2
Face 1
Neck 1
Severe Bleeding 5
Head 4
Lower leg/foot 1
Severe Lacerations 3
Head 2
Hip/upper leg 1
Concussion 5
Head 5
Whiplash 7
Neck 3
Back 1
Eye 1
Head 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Contusion/Bruise 23
Head 5
Face 4
Lower arm/hand 4
Lower leg/foot 4
Shoulder/upper arm 2
Whole body 2
Abdomen/pelvis 1
Neck 1
Abrasion 28
Lower leg/foot 10
+5
Head 6
+1
Lower arm/hand 6
+1
Face 2
Whole body 2
Back 1
Hip/upper leg 1
Pain/Nausea 6
Abdomen/pelvis 1
Back 1
Chest 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Neck 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Manhattan CB64?

Preventable Speeding in CB 164 School Zones

(since 2022)

Caught Speeding Recently in CB 164

Vehicles – Caught Speeding in NYC (12 months)
  1. 2017 Black Infiniti Apur (5426399) – 192 times • 2 in last 90d here
  2. 2022 Whbk Me/Be Suburban (LTJ3931) – 144 times • 9 in last 90d here
  3. 2024 Gray Toyota Suburban (LHW6496) – 135 times • 1 in last 90d here
  4. 2018 Nissan Spor (V39VBY) – 133 times • 2 in last 90d here
  5. 2018 Ford Mp (KAL6193) – 127 times • 1 in last 90d here
Afternoon on Central Park West

Afternoon on Central Park West

Manhattan CB64: Jan 1, 2022 - Sep 18, 2025

Just after midday on Sep 6, 2025, at W 93 St and Central Park West, a man on a bike was hit by a driver turning left. He was injured. Police records list shock and bleeding.

This Week

  • Sep 6, at W 81 St and Central Park West, a truck driver turned left and four people walking at the intersection were hurt; two suffered severe head bleeding, one recorded as a serious injury. Source
  • Sep 7, at W 96 St and Central Park West, two drivers turning left crashed; one person in a car was hurt. Source

The toll does not stop

Since 2022, this community board has recorded 570 crashes, 2 people killed, and 331 injured, including 12 serious injuries. Source

Year to date, there have been 77 crashes, 1 death, and 4 serious injuries, compared with 88 crashes, 0 deaths, and 1 serious injury over the same stretch last year. Source

Afternoons cut deep here. Around 3 PM, injuries peak at 31, with 26 more at 4 PM; a death is logged at 5 PM. Source

Corners that keep breaking people

Central Park West is the pain line. It accounts for 86 injuries in this board. Data. W 81 St shows 6 injuries with two serious. Data.

Turn movements keep showing up. Left turns figure in recent crashes at W 93 St, W 81 St, W 96 St, and past cases at W 69 St and E 101 St. Records. Police also record failure to yield and distraction in multiple injuries here. Records.

Trucks and buses are few but heavy in harm. In pedestrian cases, truck drivers are tied to one death and seven total cases. Records.

What would help here is not theory: daylight the corners; give walkers a head start; harden the turns so drivers slow; steer trucks off the pedestrian spine and enforce yielding at the worst hours. The map tells you where.

The people paid to act

This board sits in Council District District 6, Assembly District AD 69, and State Senate District SD 47. Albany has a live tool for the worst repeat speeders. The Stop Super Speeders Act (S 4045) would require intelligent speed limiters for drivers with long violation records. Senator Brad Hoylman‑Sigal co‑sponsored it and voted yes in committee in June 2025. Record. Assembly Member Micah Lasher co‑sponsors the Assembly version (A 2299). Record.

City Hall holds another lever: lower the default speed limit and build for slower turns. Advocates have laid out the steps and who to call. Details.

Make it stop

A man on a bike went down on Central Park West. Another day, another corner. The tools to slow this are on the table. Use them. Act now.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is this?
This report covers Manhattan Community Board 64, including Central Park. It overlaps Council District 6, Assembly Districts 67, 68, 69, 75, and State Senate Districts 28, 30, 47.
What changed this year?
Year to date, this board has 77 crashes, 1 death, and 4 serious injuries, compared with 88 crashes, 0 deaths, and 1 serious injury over the same period last year, per NYC Open Data.
Why call out left turns and trucks?
Recent crashes here involve left turns at W 93 St, W 81 St, and W 96 St. Pedestrian cases tied to truck drivers include 1 death and 7 total cases in this area since 2022, according to NYC Open Data.
Who represents this area on safety policy?
Council District 6 is represented by Gale A. Brewer. State Senator Brad Hoylman‑Sigal (SD 47) co‑sponsored and voted yes on S 4045. Assembly Member Micah Lasher (AD 69) co‑sponsors A 2299.
How were these numbers calculated?
We used NYC Open Data’s Motor Vehicle Collisions datasets (Crashes h9gi‑nx95, Persons f55k‑p6yu, Vehicles bm4k‑52h4). We filtered for crashes within Manhattan Community Board 64 from 2022‑01‑01 to 2025‑09‑18 and tallied totals, deaths, injuries, serious injuries, time‑of‑day, locations, and vehicle types. You can explore the base datasets here, with related tables for Persons and Vehicles.
What is CrashCount?
We’re a tool for helping hold local politicians and other actors accountable for their failure to protect you when you’re walking or cycling in NYC. We update our site constantly to provide you with up to date information on what’s happening in your neighborhood.

Citations

Citations
  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – Crashes - Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-18
  • File S 4045 - Bill text and votes , Open States / NY Senate, Published 2025-06-11

Other Representatives

Assembly Member Micah Lasher

District 69

Twitter: @MicahLasher

Council Member Gale A. Brewer

District 6

State Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal

District 47

Other Geographies

Manhattan CB64 Manhattan Community Board 64 sits in Manhattan, Precinct 22, District 6, AD 69, SD 47.

It contains Central Park.

See also
Boroughs
City Council Districts
Neighborhoods
State_assembly_districts
State Senate Districts

Traffic Safety Timeline for Manhattan Community Board 64

19
Int 0724-2024 Brewer co-sponsors curb repair bill, boosting pedestrian safety citywide.

Mar 19 - Council bill orders DOT to repair broken curbs during street resurfacing. Hazardous curbs trip, trap, and injure. The fix is overdue. Pedestrians need solid ground. Council moves to force action.

Int 0724-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced March 19, 2024, the bill commands DOT to repair broken curbs that pose safety hazards during any resurfacing project. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code... requiring that the department of transportation repair broken curbs as part of resurfacing projects.' Council Members Schulman, Gennaro (primary), Gutiérrez, Louis, Brewer, and Avilés sponsor the measure. The bill targets a simple danger: shattered curbs that trip and injure. If passed, DOT must fix these hazards as routine, not afterthought. The law would take effect 120 days after enactment.


7
Int 0541-2024 Brewer co-sponsors bill banning moving billboards, boosting street safety.

Mar 7 - Council aims to ban moving billboards. These rolling ads distract drivers. The bill locks in an existing rule. Streets need fewer distractions. Safety for walkers and riders comes first.

Bill Int 0541-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced March 7, 2024, by Council Members Bottcher (primary), Brannan, Brewer, and Restler, it seeks to ban moving billboards. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to banning moving billboards.' These billboards are already illegal under city rules. The bill would codify 34 RCNY 4-12(j), making the ban law. Bottcher and co-sponsors want to cut visual clutter and driver distraction. The bill was referred to committee on March 7, 2024.


29
Brewer Questions Effectiveness of Residential Parking Permit Systems

Feb 29 - Councilmember De La Rosa sounded the alarm. Congestion pricing looms. Uptown streets may flood with out-of-town cars. Residents want parking permits. The council debated. The bills stalled. The city waits. Vulnerable road users face the fallout.

On February 29, 2024, Councilmember Carmen De La Rosa and colleagues introduced bills for residential parking permits in response to congestion pricing. The matter, debated in the council, centered on the fear that 'communities like mine...will become sort of ground zero for out-of-community folks coming in to park,' as De La Rosa warned. The bills did not advance. Gale Brewer, now a councilmember, highlighted mixed results from other cities and withheld endorsement, saying, 'we didn't hear great feedback from the systems that exist.' Residents pushed hard, but politicians did not move. The Department of Transportation said state legislation is needed. No safety analyst assessed the impact on vulnerable road users. The city remains divided, and the streets stay dangerous.


28
Int 0178-2024 Brewer co-sponsors bill banning fake license plates, boosting street safety.

Feb 28 - Council moves to outlaw fake plates. Fraud hides reckless drivers. Bill targets sellers, sets fines. Streets need truth. Law aims to strip shields from danger.

Bill Int 0178-2024 sits with the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled "A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to prohibiting the sale or distribution of fraudulent license plates," makes it illegal to sell or distribute fake or temporary plates, with civil penalties for violators. Council Member Lincoln Restler leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Brewer, Brannan, and Avilés. The bill was referred to committee the same day. Fraudulent plates let reckless drivers vanish. This measure aims to close that escape, exposing those who endanger lives.


28
Int 0301-2024 Brewer co-sponsors bill boosting pedestrian safety with solar crosswalks.

Feb 28 - Council wants 500 solar-lit crosswalks in five years. Bright signals cut through the dark. The bill demands action and a study. Safety for walkers, not drivers. No more hiding in the shadows.

Int 0301-2024, now laid over in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill orders the Department of Transportation to install at least 100 illuminated, solar-powered traffic control devices at crosswalks each year for five years. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law...in relation to the installation of solar-powered crosswalks.' Council Member Lincoln Restler leads, joined by Menin, Brooks-Powers, Rivera, and others. The bill also requires a study comparing these devices to standard signs. The city must report findings within two years. The goal: more visible crossings, fewer deadly impacts.


28
Int 0450-2024 Brewer co-sponsors bill boosting street safety by expanding community use of outdoor spaces.

Feb 28 - Council bill pushes DOT to let schools, centers, and institutions use streets outside their doors. More people, less traffic. Streets shift from cars to community. Still in committee.

Int 0450-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure since February 28, 2024. The bill orders DOT to create a program letting community centers, schools, arts, and religious institutions use adjacent outdoor spaces. The matter title reads: 'requiring the department of transportation to establish a program to allow community centers, schools, arts and cultural institutions and religious institutions to use adjacent outdoor spaces.' Council Member Shekar Krishnan leads, joined by Stevens, Restler, Won, and others. The bill has not yet passed. If enacted, it could reclaim space from cars, giving it to people. No formal safety analysis yet, but the measure could mean safer, more vibrant streets for all.


28
Int 0474-2024 Brewer co-sponsors bill for dynamic parking zones, minimal safety impact.

Feb 28 - Council bill pushes demand-based parking in crowded boroughs. DOT must set rates, tweak with notice. Exempt vehicles dodge new fees. Streets may shift. Pedestrians and cyclists watch the curb.

Int 0474-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, by Julie Won and co-sponsored by Williams, Restler, Salaam, Bottcher, Riley, Brewer, Farías, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill orders DOT to create at least one dynamic parking zone per borough, with rates rising or falling by real-time demand. DOT must set the range before launch and give a week’s notice for changes. Vehicles with special permits stay exempt. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to establishing dynamic parking zones.' No safety analyst has assessed the impact on vulnerable road users.


28
Int 0255-2024 Brewer co-sponsors bill increasing transparency on police vehicle force incidents.

Feb 28 - Council bill demands NYPD track every time cops use cars as weapons. No more hiding behind vague stats. Each crash, each injury, must be counted. The city moves closer to truth.

Int 0255-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety. Introduced February 28, 2024, by Council Member Lincoln Restler and co-sponsored by Hudson, Won, Hanif, Bottcher, Brewer, Avilés, Abreu, Ossé, Krishnan, Williams, Cabán, Nurse, Sanchez, and at the Brooklyn Borough President's request. The bill reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code... in relation to use of force incidents involving police department use of a motor vehicle.' It forces the NYPD to report every use of a car to control a subject. No more lumping these acts with other force. The bill aims for hard numbers and real accountability. Vulnerable road users—pedestrians, cyclists, passengers—will no longer be invisible in police data.


28
Int 0271-2024 Brewer co-sponsors bill speeding up protected bike lanes, boosting street safety.

Feb 28 - Council wants 100 miles of protected bike lanes each year. Cyclists need steel and concrete, not paint. The bill sits in committee. Streets could change. Lives hang in the balance.

Int 0271-2024, now in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, was introduced on February 28, 2024. The bill reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to the installation of protected bicycle lanes.' Council Member Lincoln Restler leads, joined by Rivera, Louis, Hanif, Ossé, Brewer, Cabán, Nurse, Hudson, Salaam, Bottcher, Gutiérrez, Feliz, Won, and Joseph. The bill demands the Department of Transportation install 100 miles of protected bike lanes per year for six years. The aim: real protection for cyclists and a safer city grid.


28
Int 0177-2024 Brewer co-sponsors bill targeting fake plates, boosting street safety.

Feb 28 - Council targets fake and expired plates. Bill sets fines. Ten-day grace for expired tags. Crackdown aims at cars that dodge law and endanger streets. Committee on Public Safety holds the measure.

Int 0177-2024 sits in the Committee on Public Safety after introduction on February 28, 2024. The bill, titled 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...prohibiting the operation of a motor vehicle with fraudulent or expired license plates,' makes it illegal to drive with fake or expired plates, including temporary ones. Civil penalties apply, but drivers with expired plates get a 10-day cure period. Council Member Selvena N. Brooks-Powers leads as primary sponsor, joined by Feliz, Salamanca, Powers, Restler, Won, Brewer, Schulman, Ung, Marte, Hudson, Avilés, De La Rosa, and the Brooklyn Borough President. The bill targets drivers who hide behind illegal plates, a tactic often linked to hit-and-runs and reckless driving.


28
Int 0411-2024 Brewer co-sponsors bill to revoke private parking permits, boosting street safety.

Feb 28 - Council bill targets private car permits. Only elected officials, disabled drivers, and union contracts keep parking perks. Streets may clear. Danger shifts. Committee weighs next step.

Int 0411-2024 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure after its February 28, 2024 introduction. The bill, sponsored by Julie Won, Lincoln Restler, Gale Brewer, Christopher Marte, Erik Bottcher, Alexa Avilés, and the Brooklyn Borough President, aims to 'prohibit any city agency from issuing parking permits to private vehicles that do not have an elected official license plate, and would provide for the revocation of such parking permits.' Exemptions remain for people with disabilities and collective bargaining agreements. The bill seeks to cut back on private car privileges, a move that could reshape curb space and city streets.


28
Res 0090-2024 Brewer co-sponsors SAFE Streets Act, boosting pedestrian and cyclist safety citywide.

Feb 28 - Council urges Albany to pass SAFE Streets Act. Lower speed limits. Rights for crash victims. Safe passing for cyclists. Complete streets. City demands action as deaths rise. Streets remain deadly. Lawmakers must act.

Resolution 0090-2024 sits in the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced February 28, 2024, it calls on the state to pass S.2422 ('Sammy’s Law') and A.1901, part of the SAFE Streets Act. The matter title: 'Resolution calling on the New York State Legislature to pass, and the Governor to sign, S.2422... allowing New York city to establish a lower speed limit, and A.1901, enacting a crash victims bill of rights.' Council Member Shahana K. Hanif leads, joined by Gutiérrez, Hudson, Nurse, and others. The resolution demands lower speed limits, crash victim rights, safe passing for cyclists, and complete street design. It cites rising traffic deaths and the failure of current measures. The Council wants Albany to give the city real power to protect people on its streets.


28
Brewer Criticizes Council Inaction on Safety Boosting Bike Lanes

Feb 28 - DOT missed legal targets for protected lanes. Council mostly silent. Mayor cut funds. Projects stalled. Streets stay deadly. Vulnerable New Yorkers left exposed. Leadership absent. Promises broken. Change delayed. The city’s most fragile pay the price.

On February 28, 2024, the conflict between the City Council and Department of Transportation over the Streets Master Plan erupted. The DOT failed to meet 2023’s legal benchmarks: just 5.2 miles of protected bus lanes built out of 30 required, and 32 miles of protected bike lanes out of 50 mandated by 2019 law. Council Member Chi Ossé (District 36) was mentioned, but only six of 51 council members responded to DOT’s call for safety project suggestions. The matter centers on the DOT’s report and council inaction: 'Out of 51 City Council members, only six responded to a request from DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez for recommended locations where street safety improvements should be made in their districts.' Mayor Adams slashed DOT’s budget and weakened projects, while council leaders deflected responsibility. Advocates like Jon Orcutt and Elizabeth Adams demanded decisive action, warning that delays and excuses cost lives. More than half of New Yorkers remain far from protected bike lanes as daily cycling surges. The city’s vulnerable road users remain at risk while officials pass the buck.


28
Brewer Highlights Council Ignored Safety Outreach Requests

Feb 28 - Council and DOT are at war. Bike lanes stall. Bus lanes stall. Six of 51 council members respond to DOT’s call for safety ideas. Most ignore it. Mayor Adams shrugs off legal mandates. Projects stall. Streets stay dangerous. Vulnerable road users pay.

On February 28, 2024, the New York City Council and Department of Transportation (DOT) faced off over street safety project implementation. The matter, described as a conflict over 'the implementation of street safety improvements, particularly protected bike lanes and bus lanes,' exposes deep rifts. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez asked council members for input; only six of 51 replied. Council Member Gale Brewer cited ignored past outreach. Joe Borelli dismissed bike lanes and DOT’s efforts. Speaker Adrienne Adams and Transportation Chair Selvena Brooks-Powers insisted the agency, not lawmakers, must pick locations. The city is failing to meet legal benchmarks for new lanes. Mayor Adams has sidelined mandates for community feedback. Advocates blame both the council and mayor for delays, missed projects, and rising danger. Decisive leadership is missing. The city’s legal obligations for street safety remain unmet.


28
Gale A Brewer Supports Neutral Safety E-Bike Penalty Increase

Feb 28 - Council cracks down on shops selling fire-prone e-bike batteries. Penalties rise. FDNY joins enforcement. Vendors face new rules—no more goods in bike lanes. Brewer and Menin push reforms. Fires killed 18 last year. Law aims to protect lives, streets.

On February 28, 2024, the City Council passed a package of bills led by Councilmember Gale A. Brewer (District 6). The legislation, heard in committee and passed on this date, increases penalties for businesses selling uncertified e-bikes and scooters with dangerous lithium-ion batteries. Brewer said, 'We are not only going after the batteries, we are going after the stores that are selling the batteries.' The FDNY will now assist the Department of Consumer and Worker Protections in enforcement. Fines for repeat violators can reach $2,000. Brewer’s second bill requires e-bike sellers to post safety information in stores and online, with fines up to $350. Councilmember Julie Menin sponsored additional reforms easing street vendor regulations and banning vending in bike lanes. The bills respond to a deadly spike in battery fires—18 killed in 2023, triple the previous year. Lawmakers aim to protect vulnerable road users and workers who rely on these devices.


27
S 8658 Hoylman-Sigal co-sponsors congestion pricing bill, boosting street safety for all.

Feb 27 - Senate bill S 8658 orders $90 million for faster, more reliable buses and fare-free rides. Sponsors push MTA to act. Riders wait for relief. Streets choke on traffic. The city holds its breath.

Senate bill S 8658, introduced on February 27, 2024, sits in the sponsorship stage. The bill, titled 'get congestion pricing right act,' directs the MTA to spend $45 million to boost bus frequency and reliability, and another $45 million to expand fare-free bus pilots in New York City. Senators Michael Gianaris (primary sponsor), Jabari Brisport, Brad Hoylman-Sigal, and Julia Salazar back the measure. The bill demands reporting on these investments. No safety analyst has yet assessed its impact on vulnerable road users.


21
Hoylman-Sigal Opposes Harmful Police Crackdowns on Mopeds

Feb 21 - More delivery workers now register their mopeds. Police crackdowns and ticket threats push them to comply. Advocates step in, guiding new immigrants through red tape. Sellers rarely warn buyers about legal requirements. Workers pay steep fees to keep earning and avoid losing their rides.

This report, published February 21, 2024, details the surge in moped registrations among New York City delivery workers. DMV data show ZIP codes with many deliveristas now lead in registered mopeds. The article quotes workers like Junior Pichardo, who says, 'If you have plates, [the police] won’t summons you.' Eric Macario and William Medina, both delivery workers, highlight confusion and lack of information about registration and insurance. Medina blames sellers for failing to inform buyers. State Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal and Assembly Member Alex Bores have introduced a bill to require sellers to register mopeds before sale, but it remains pending. For now, advocates help workers navigate the system. Ligia Guallpa of the Worker’s Justice Project says many only learn the rules after police seize their mopeds or issue tickets. The crackdown exposes systemic gaps, leaving vulnerable workers to bear the cost and risk.


13
S 2714 Cleare co-sponsors bill boosting street safety for all users.

Feb 13 - Senate passes S 2714. Bill pushes complete street design. Aim: safer roads for all. Pedestrians, cyclists, and riders get space. Car dominance challenged. Lawmakers move to cut street carnage.

Senate bill S 2714, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' advanced through committee and passed several Senate votes, most recently on March 27, 2024. Sponsored by Timothy M. Kennedy with support from Jake Ashby, Jamaal Bailey, and others, the bill mandates street designs that protect everyone—not just drivers. The measure saw strong support but faced opposition from some senators. By requiring complete street principles, S 2714 aims to reduce danger for pedestrians, cyclists, and transit users. The bill marks a shift away from car-first planning, forcing cities to build streets for people, not just traffic.


13
S 2714 Hoylman-Sigal co-sponsors bill boosting street safety for all users.

Feb 13 - Senate passes S 2714. Bill pushes complete street design. Aim: safer roads for all. Pedestrians, cyclists, and riders get space. Car dominance challenged. Lawmakers move to cut street carnage.

Senate bill S 2714, titled 'Enables safe access to public roads for all users by utilizing complete street design principles,' advanced through committee and passed several Senate votes, most recently on March 27, 2024. Sponsored by Timothy M. Kennedy with support from Jake Ashby, Jamaal Bailey, and others, the bill mandates street designs that protect everyone—not just drivers. The measure saw strong support but faced opposition from some senators. By requiring complete street principles, S 2714 aims to reduce danger for pedestrians, cyclists, and transit users. The bill marks a shift away from car-first planning, forcing cities to build streets for people, not just traffic.


9
Unlicensed Moped Driver Rear-Ends Sedan

Feb 9 - A moped traveling south on 5 Avenue struck a sedan from behind. The moped’s unlicensed driver followed too closely, causing a collision. A 29-year-old male passenger was ejected and suffered facial abrasions, conscious but injured.

According to the police report, the crash occurred at 5:15 on 5 Avenue involving a moped and a sedan both traveling south. The moped driver, who was unlicensed, failed to maintain a safe distance and rear-ended the sedan, a clear case of "Following Too Closely." The moped’s point of impact was the center back end of the sedan, while the sedan showed no damage. The moped carried two occupants; a 29-year-old male passenger was ejected during the collision. He sustained abrasions to his face and was conscious at the scene. The passenger was not wearing any safety equipment. No contributing factors were noted for the passenger, and the report highlights driver error as the primary cause.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4701304 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19