Crash Count for District 39
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 5,037
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 2,572
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 608
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 24
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 15
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 13, 2025
Carnage in CD 39
Killed 14
Crush Injuries 8
Lower leg/foot 4
Head 2
Face 1
Lower arm/hand 1
Amputation 1
Back 1
Severe Bleeding 6
Head 3
Face 1
Lower arm/hand 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Severe Lacerations 6
Head 2
Lower leg/foot 2
Face 1
Lower arm/hand 1
Whole body 1
Concussion 21
Head 10
+5
Lower leg/foot 5
Neck 3
Chest 1
Lower arm/hand 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Whiplash 66
Neck 39
+34
Head 12
+7
Back 11
+6
Shoulder/upper arm 3
Whole body 3
Lower leg/foot 2
Chest 1
Face 1
Contusion/Bruise 147
Lower leg/foot 57
+52
Lower arm/hand 22
+17
Head 18
+13
Shoulder/upper arm 16
+11
Back 11
+6
Abdomen/pelvis 8
+3
Hip/upper leg 7
+2
Neck 7
+2
Whole body 4
Face 3
Chest 1
Abrasion 116
Lower leg/foot 41
+36
Lower arm/hand 32
+27
Head 13
+8
Shoulder/upper arm 9
+4
Face 8
+3
Whole body 7
+2
Hip/upper leg 6
+1
Back 4
Neck 2
Pain/Nausea 56
Head 11
+6
Lower arm/hand 8
+3
Whole body 8
+3
Lower leg/foot 7
+2
Back 6
+1
Shoulder/upper arm 6
+1
Neck 5
Abdomen/pelvis 3
Chest 3
Hip/upper leg 2
Face 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 13, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in District 39?

Preventable Speeding in CD 39 School Zones

(since 2022)

Caught Speeding Recently in CD 39

Vehicles – Caught Speeding in NYC (12 months)
  1. 2025 Blue Acura Sedan (KXH4599) – 53 times • 1 in last 90d here
  2. 2016 White Lexus Suburban (LNC2044) – 36 times • 1 in last 90d here
  3. 2016 White Jeep Suburban (LKR1028) – 32 times • 1 in last 90d here
  4. 2023 Black Acura Suburban (LBJ8017) – 31 times • 1 in last 90d here
  5. 2024 Land Rover Station Wagon (KVH2364) – 28 times • 1 in last 90d here
BQE, Atlantic: fire and flight

BQE, Atlantic: fire and flight

District 39: Jan 1, 2022 - Aug 31, 2025

Just before 9 AM on Aug 27, 2025, a motorcyclist hit a box truck on the BQE near the Atlantic Ave exit. The truck kept going, police said; a driver was later arrested and charged with leaving the scene that led to death (ABC7, NY Daily News).

Since Jan 1, 2022, in Council District 39, 15 people have been killed and 2,567 injured in traffic crashes. That toll is drawn from city crash records for this district (NYC Open Data).

Deaths do not come at random hours. The 3 PM hour has seen the sharpest spike, with three deaths recorded in that slot alone in this district’s data window (NYC Open Data).

The corridor that keeps bleeding

The BQE is a hotspot here. The dataset lists one death and 166 injuries tied to crashes on the Brooklyn‑Queens Expressway within District 39 (NYC Open Data). The Aug 27 hit‑and‑run happened by the Atlantic Ave exit, in the heart of that zone (ABC7, NY Daily News).

Other corners in this district keep hurting people: Ocean Pkwy, Union St, Caton Ave — each listed with clusters of injuries, and in two cases, deaths (NYC Open Data).

Turning trucks, broken bones

Right‑turning trucks killed twice here in the last two years. An 83‑year‑old pedestrian died at Butler St and Bond St after a dump truck’s right turn on Jun 26, 2024 (NYC Open Data). A 16‑year‑old on an e‑bike was killed at Coney Island Ave and Ditmas Ave by a box truck making a right on Aug 19, 2024 (NYC Open Data).

A taxi struck a 72‑year‑old pedestrian at 5th Ave and Flatbush Ave before dawn on Dec 28, 2023. She died at the intersection (NYC Open Data).

Clear the corners. Fix the turns.

Council Member Shahana Hanif is sponsoring a bill to force curb extensions at the city’s most dangerous intersections — five per borough each year (Int 0285‑2024). She is also a co‑sponsor on a separate bill to ban parking within 20 feet of crosswalks and build at least 1,000 hardened daylighted corners a year (Int 1138‑2024). Brooklyn electeds have pushed the city to adopt universal daylighting with physical barriers, not paint (Streetsblog).

These are the kinds of fixes that protect people from turning trucks and cars on Ocean Pkwy, Union St, and Caton Ave. They keep eyes on crosswalks. They keep people alive. The Council should pass them.

Stop the worst repeat speeders

After a mother and two daughters were killed in Gravesend, lawmakers and advocates rallied to pass the Stop Super Speeders Act, which would require speed‑limiting tech for drivers who rack up repeat violations. “The speed limiter technology is available to us. Let’s use it. It will save lives,” Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon said at the rally (Brooklyn Paper).

District 39’s state delegation includes Assembly Member Robert Carroll and State Senator Steve Chan. The record provided here shows Hanif’s support for stronger street safety laws and the city daylighting bills; it does not document whether Carroll or Chan have co‑sponsored the state speed‑limiter bill. What gives?

One street, one choice

The BQE took another life in Cobble Hill. Ocean Pkwy, Union St, Caton Ave keep adding bodies to the ledger. The fixes sit on desks in City Hall and Albany.

Lower speeds. Harden the corners. Make the turns safe. Then do it again on the next block.

Take one step now. Tell your officials to pass the daylighting and curb‑extension bills and back speed limiters for repeat offenders. Start here.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is this?
New York City Council District 39 in Brooklyn, covering Park Slope, Windsor Terrace–South Slope, Kensington, Carroll Gardens–Cobble Hill–Gowanus–Red Hook, and Prospect Park.
What does the data show for District 39 since 2022?
City records show 15 people killed and 2,567 injured in crashes across the district between Jan 1, 2022 and Aug 31, 2025. Hotspots include the BQE, Ocean Pkwy, Union St, and Caton Ave.
How were these numbers calculated?
We used NYC Open Data’s Motor Vehicle Collisions datasets (Crashes, Persons, Vehicles). We filtered for incidents within Council District 39 from 2022-01-01 to 2025-08-31 and tallied deaths and injuries across modes. Hourly patterns, hotspots, and example crashes come from the same datasets. You can open a reproducible filtered query here. Data accessed Aug 31, 2025.
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.
Who can act on fixes right now?
The City Council can pass daylighting and curb-extension bills (Int 1138-2024 and Int 0285-2024). In Albany, legislators can advance speed limiters for repeat offenders, as urged at a Brooklyn rally after a fatal crash.

Citations

Citations

Fix the Problem

Shahana Hanif
Council Member Shahana Hanif
District 39
District Office:
456 5th Avenue, 3rd Floor, Brooklyn, NY 11215
718-499-1090
Legislative Office:
250 Broadway, Suite 1745, New York, NY 10007
212-788-6969

Other Representatives

Robert Carroll
Assembly Member Robert Carroll
District 44
District Office:
416 7th Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11215
Legislative Office:
Room 557, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12248
Steve Chan
State Senator Steve Chan
District 17
District Office:
6605 Fort Hamilton Parkway, Brooklyn, NY 11219
Legislative Office:
Room 615, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Other Geographies

District 39 Council District 39 sits in Brooklyn, Precinct 78, AD 44, SD 17.

It contains Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill-Gowanus-Red Hook, Park Slope, Windsor Terrace-South Slope, Kensington, Prospect Park, Brooklyn CB55, Brooklyn CB6.

See also
Boroughs
State_assembly_districts
State Senate Districts

Traffic Safety Timeline for Council District 39

2
Police Roadblock Ends In Fatal Crash

May 2 - A stolen Porsche sped down the Belt Parkway. Police set a roadblock. The driver swerved, nearly hitting a lieutenant. A shot rang out. The car crashed. One man died. The state investigates. The road stayed dangerous.

ABC7 reported on May 2, 2025, that a man was killed after a police-involved shooting during a stolen car stop in Brooklyn. Officers, following new NYPD pursuit rules, did not chase but instead set a roadblock. According to NYPD Chief John Chell, 'We didn't pursue the vehicle, we strategically radioed ahead to shut down traffic.' The driver, Jumaane Wright, swerved toward officers, nearly striking a lieutenant, who fired a single shot. Wright crashed a mile later and died at the hospital. The Attorney General's investigation is standard for such incidents. The case highlights risks in high-speed police interventions and the ongoing challenge of balancing pursuit policies with public safety.


1
Int 0193-2024 Hanif votes yes on taxi dooring warning decals, no major safety change.

May 1 - Council passes law. Taxis and for-hire cars must post bold warnings on rear doors. Riders face the message: look for cyclists before swinging the door. A move to cut dooring. City acts. Cyclists stay in the crosshairs.

Int 0193-2024, now law, cleared the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and passed City Council on May 1, 2025. The bill, titled 'A Local Law...requiring taxis and for-hire vehicles to display a decal warning passengers to look for cyclists when opening the door,' demands clear warning signs on all rear passenger doors. Lincoln Restler led as primary sponsor, joined by Gutiérrez, Hudson, Rivera, Won, and others. The Taxi and Limousine Commission must provide decals at no cost. The law aims to fight dooring, a threat to cyclists citywide. Enacted May 31, 2025, it takes effect in 120 days.


30
Police Kill Driver After Parkway Chase

Apr 30 - A driver sped through a police blockade on the Belt Parkway. He nearly hit a lieutenant. The officer fired. The driver died at the scene. A passenger was arrested. The lieutenant suffered minor injuries. The road closed for investigation.

amNY reported on April 30, 2025, that NYPD officers shot and killed a driver in Brooklyn after a chase on the Belt Parkway. Police said the car had mismatched, stolen Pennsylvania plates. Chief John Chell stated, "They observed a suspicious Porsche with suspicious plates." Officers tried to stop the vehicle, but the driver fled, re-entered the parkway, and drove through a police blockade, nearly striking a lieutenant. The officer fired, hitting the driver in the chest. The driver died at the scene. A passenger was detained. The article highlights the risks of high-speed chases and the dangers posed by erratic driving and police intervention on city roads.


24
Res 0854-2025 Hanif co-sponsors bill boosting street safety by curbing repeat speeders.

Apr 24 - Council pushes Albany to force speed limiters on chronic speeders. The move targets reckless drivers. Streets stay deadly while the bill sits in committee. Pedestrians and cyclists wait for action.

Resolution 0854-2025, now laid over in the Committee on Public Safety, urges passage of S.7621/A.7979. The measure calls for 'requiring the installation of intelligent speed assistance devices for repeated violation of maximum speed limits.' Council Member Lincoln Restler leads, joined by nine co-sponsors including Yusef Salaam and Shahana Hanif. The bill landed in committee on April 24, 2025, with no vote yet. If passed at the state level, it would force repeat speeders to install devices that block speeding. The Council’s action highlights the ongoing risk to vulnerable road users as reckless drivers remain unchecked.


24
Unlicensed Driver Kills Pedestrian in Brooklyn

Apr 24 - A 101-year-old woman crossed with the signal. An unlicensed driver turned left and struck her. She died days later. The driver was arrested at the scene. Another deadly crash by an unlicensed driver happened nearby just a week before.

The Brooklyn Paper (April 24, 2025) reports that Taibel Brod, age 101, was hit by a 2023 GMC Yukon while crossing Brooklyn Avenue at Montgomery Street with the walk signal. Police say the driver, Menachem Shagalow, was unlicensed and charged with aggravated unlicensed operation, failure to exercise due care, and unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle. Brod died from her injuries at Maimonides Medical Center on April 20. The article notes, 'Menachem was arrested at 8:37 p.m. on April 8 shortly after the incident.' This crash follows another fatal collision involving a suspended driver in Brooklyn the previous week. The incidents highlight ongoing dangers from unlicensed drivers and raise questions about enforcement and systemic safety failures.


16
Road report: Here’s where lead-foot drivers repeatedly get speed-camera tickets in NYC

Apr 16 - New research from Transportation Alternatives and Families for Safe Streets announced a report detailing NYC's top 10 super speeders.


10
Brooklyn Hit-And-Run Kills Passenger

Apr 10 - A driver ran a stop sign in East New York. He slammed into a school bus. His passenger died. The bus driver was hurt. The driver fled but police caught him. The street stayed stained. The system failed to protect.

According to amNY (April 10, 2025), Tyree Epps faces charges after a deadly crash at Van Sinderen and Blake avenues. Epps, unlicensed, "blew a stop sign" and struck a school bus, killing his passenger, Imani Vance, and injuring the bus driver. The article quotes Brooklyn DA Eric Gonzalez: "The tragic loss of Imani Vance was allegedly caused by the defendant's reckless decision to ignore a stop sign and drive at excessive speeds." Epps left the scene, tried to escape in an Uber, and was arrested after fleeing on foot. The crash was one of three fatal Brooklyn incidents that weekend. City data cited in the article shows ongoing danger: at least 15 killed in Kings County so far this year, with thousands injured, often due to driver inattention and failure to yield. The charges and details highlight persistent risks and enforcement gaps on city streets.


10
Int 1233-2025 Hanif co-sponsors bill to require vegetated medians, boosting cyclist and pedestrian safety.

Apr 10 - Council bill orders trees and plants on new medians between bike lanes and car traffic. Concrete gets green. Barriers grow roots. The city must build for life, not speed.

Int 1233-2025 sits with the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced April 10, 2025, it demands new medians between bicycle lanes and motor vehicles be built for trees and vegetation, pending feasibility. The bill’s title: “A Local Law to amend the administrative code... in relation to the planting of vegetation on new medians separating bicycle lanes from motorized vehicle traffic.” Council Member Shekar Krishnan leads, joined by Bottcher, Ossé, Brannan, Hanif, and Brooks-Powers. They push the city to plant, or allow planting, in every new median. The law would take effect 120 days after passage. No safety analyst note was provided.


10
Int 1105-2024 Hanif misses vote on street safety tracking bill, safety gains delayed.

Apr 10 - Council passed a law forcing DOT to post sharp, regular updates on street safety projects. Progress on bike lanes, bus lanes, and signals must go public. No more hiding delays or cost overruns. The city must show its work.

Bill Int 1105-2024, now enacted, came through the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. Introduced November 13, 2024, it passed Council on April 10, 2025, and became law May 10, 2025. The bill's title: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code...in relation to tracking progress made towards the requirements of the streets master plan.' Council Member Julie Won led sponsorship, joined by Brooks-Powers, Hanif, Ayala, and others. The law demands DOT post annual and monthly updates on every project tied to the master plan—listing details, timelines, funding, and setbacks. This law brings sunlight to street safety work, making the city answer for every mile and missed deadline.


9
School Bus Slams Fence In Brooklyn

Apr 9 - A school bus tore through a fence in Ditmas Park. An eight-year-old boy and his mother took the brunt. Broken arm. Head and neck wounds. The bus mounted the sidewalk, iron twisted, cinderblock shattered. The driver stayed. The street stayed dangerous.

CBS New York reported on April 9, 2025, that a school bus crashed into a fence at Bedford Avenue and Farragut Road in Brooklyn, injuring an 8-year-old boy and his 43-year-old mother. The article quotes Councilmember Farrah Louis: "It appeared the driver was driving and hit the gas instead of the brakes, trying to avoid another car, and that's how he crashed." No students were on the bus at the time. The victims were hospitalized with serious injuries. Witnesses described the bus waiting for a pedestrian before suddenly jumping the curb and smashing through the fence. The incident highlights ongoing traffic dangers in the area and raises questions about driver error and the need for improved street safety.


3
Hanif Supports Safety Boosting Ashland Place Bike Lane

Apr 3 - Brooklyn’s Ashland Place stays deadly. DOT delays a promised bike lane. Elected officials and residents demand action. Private interests block progress. Cyclists face crashes and fear. The city shrugs. The gap remains. Lives hang in the balance.

On April 3, 2025, a coalition of Brooklyn officials—including Council Members Crystal Hudson, Shahana Hanif, Lincoln Restler, Assembly Members Andrew Gounardes, Jo Anne Simon, Phara Souffrant Forrest, Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, and Borough President Antonio Reynoso—sent a letter urging DOT to finish the protected bike lane on Ashland Place. The letter called the block a 'missing link in Brooklyn’s protected bike lane network.' Brooklyn Community Board 2 backed the demand. DOT Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez and Borough Commissioner Keith Bray offered only vague replies. The block’s exclusion traces to a mayoral advisor’s intervention for developer Two Trees. Advocates like Kathy Park Price slammed the city: 'Private interests are able to redesign our streets, prioritizing vehicles over safety at a critical corridor.' Despite unanimous support, DOT keeps the street dangerous. The city’s inaction leaves cyclists exposed and the community frustrated.


3
Suspended Driver Kills Brooklyn Family Crossing

Apr 3 - A driver with a suspended license sped through Brooklyn. She struck a family in the crosswalk. A mother and two daughters died. Their son was left fighting for life. The driver faces serious charges. The street became a crime scene.

Gothamist reported on April 3, 2025, that Miriam Yarimi, whose license was suspended and who had 'dozens of speeding tickets since 2023,' drove her Audi A3 into a Brooklyn family, killing Natasha Saada and her two daughters. The article quotes prosecutors: Yarimi told police, 'the devil is in my eyes' and 'people are out to get me.' Police say Yarimi was speeding, struck a for-hire car, then hit the family as they crossed the street. Yarimi faces charges including manslaughter, assault, and reckless driving. Judge Jevet Johnson ordered her held without bail and kept her license suspended. The case highlights the lethal risk posed by drivers with repeated violations and suspended licenses.


2
Hanif Supports Safety Boosting Open Streets Expansion Amid Merchant Concerns

Apr 2 - Park Slope’s Open Streets plan hangs in the balance. Merchants split. Some cheer crowds and sales. Others fear ruin. Council Member Hanif and Community Board 6 gather voices. DOT holds the final word. Compromise and conflict shape Fifth Avenue’s future.

Council Member Shahana Hanif (District 39) and Community Board 6 launched a survey on April 2, 2025, to collect resident and merchant feedback on the Park Slope Open Streets program. The matter, titled 'Merchants call for compromise as Park Slope Open Streets program faces scrutiny,' centers on the proposed closure of Fifth Avenue every Saturday from May to October. Hanif’s action: gathering input and relaying concerns to the Department of Transportation (DOT) before a final decision. The survey showed strong public support—455 out of 489 respondents favored the program—but merchant opinions split. Some praised increased foot traffic and sales; others reported steep losses. Critics cited business access, traffic, and e-bike safety. Merchants petitioned Hanif and DOT for a thorough review and recovery plan. Community Board 6’s Mike Racioppo recommended proper funding and expansion. The DOT has not yet ruled. The debate spotlights the tension between public space and business survival.


2
Speeding Driver Kills Brooklyn Family Crossing

Apr 2 - A car tore down Ocean Parkway. It struck a mother and her three children. Only the youngest survived. He lost a kidney. The driver sped, ran a red, drove uninsured, license suspended. The street became a killing ground.

According to the New York Post (April 2, 2025), a 4-year-old boy remains in critical condition after a crash on Ocean Parkway killed his mother and two sisters. The article reports, "Yarimi, 35, was driving nearly double the speed limit when her Audi allegedly struck an Uber, flipped and mowed down the family." Police say Miriam Yarimi drove with a suspended license, no insurance, and expired registration, and ran a red light. She faces multiple charges, including manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide. The crash also injured an Uber driver and passengers. The case highlights the lethal consequences of unchecked speeding and gaps in enforcement against unlicensed, uninsured drivers.


1
Hanif Supports Safety Boosting Stop Super Speeders Bill

Apr 1 - After a crash killed a mother and two daughters in Gravesend, advocates and Council Member Shahana Hanif rallied for the Stop Super Speeders bill. The law would force repeat reckless drivers to use speed-limiting tech. Survivors demand action. Lawmakers promise change.

On April 1, 2025, Council Member Shahana Hanif joined a rally at Brooklyn Borough Hall demanding passage of the Stop Super Speeders bill. The bill, sponsored in Albany by State Sen. Andrew Gounardes and Assemblymember Emily Gallagher, would require drivers with repeated violations to install intelligent speed assistance (ISA) devices. These devices cap speed at 5 mph over the limit for those with 11 or more license points in 24 months or six camera tickets in a year. The rally followed a fatal Gravesend crash that killed a mother and her two daughters. Hanif and other lawmakers called current enforcement—ticketing, suspensions, fines, jail—ineffective. Assembly Member Jo Anne Simon said, 'The speed limiter technology is available to us. Let’s use it. It will save lives.' The bill is modeled on EU and Virginia laws. Some opposition remains, but supporters say the measure is urgent and practical.


1
Speeding Audi Kills Mother, Two Children

Apr 1 - A red-light runner tore through Ocean Parkway. The Audi slammed an Uber, then plowed into a family in the crosswalk. A mother and her two daughters died. Survivors watched, hurt and helpless, as medics tried to save the fallen.

According to the NY Daily News (April 1, 2025), a crash on Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn left a mother and her two daughters dead after a speeding Audi, driven by Miriam Yarimi, struck an Uber and then pedestrians in a crosswalk. Police said Yarimi was driving about 50 mph in a 25 mph zone and ran a red light with a suspended license. She was charged with manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, assault, reckless driving, and other offenses. The article quotes survivor Shakhzod Ahmedova: "After the car crash, we just saw the car flipped over and two kids on the ground. We were scared." The incident highlights the lethal consequences of unlicensed, reckless driving and raises questions about enforcement and street design on major corridors like Ocean Parkway.


31
Brooklyn Crash Spurs Speed Limiter Push

Mar 31 - A mother and two daughters died on Ocean Parkway. Their son clings to life. The driver had 21 speeding tickets. Lawmakers gather. They demand speed limiters for repeat offenders. Grief and anger fill the street. The system failed the family.

CBS New York reported on March 31, 2025, that a crash in Midwood, Brooklyn killed Natasha Saada and her two young daughters as they walked on Ocean Parkway. Their son remains hospitalized. The driver, Miriam Yarimi, had 21 speeding tickets—15 in school zones—over two years. Lawmakers and advocates called for legislation requiring speed limiter devices on cars of drivers with more than six camera violations. State Sen. Andrew Gounardes said the driver 'clearly would've met the threshold.' NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch called the crash 'a horrific tragedy caused by someone who shouldn't have been on the road.' The bill aims to prevent repeat offenders from exceeding speed limits. Lawmakers hope to present it by June.


30
Brooklyn Crash Kills Mother, Children

Mar 30 - A driver on a suspended license slammed into a family crossing Ocean Parkway. Three died: a mother, two daughters. A young son fights for life. Nine struck. The Audi had a record: dozens of violations, thousands in fines. Impact was swift, final.

According to the New York Post (March 30, 2025), Miriam Yarimi faces manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide charges after her Audi A4, driven on a suspended license, struck nine pedestrians in a Brooklyn crosswalk. The crash killed Natasha Saada and her daughters, ages 7 and 5, and left her 4-year-old son in critical condition. Police say Yarimi's car, with over 93 traffic violations and more than $10,000 in fines, collided with another vehicle before plowing into the victims. Mayor Eric Adams called for a full investigation, stating the tragedy demands answers. The case highlights the dangers of repeat traffic offenders and raises questions about enforcement and policy gaps that allow high-risk drivers to remain on city streets.


23
E-Bike Rider Runs Stop, Kills Pedestrian

Mar 23 - Luis Cruz stepped from his car. An e-bike delivery worker sped through a stop sign. The crash was sudden. Cruz died on the street. The rider stayed. The intersection has seen this before. The system pushes speed. The danger remains.

Gothamist reported on March 23, 2025, that Luis Cruz, 49, died after an e-bike delivery worker "sped through a stop sign" and struck him as he exited his double-parked car in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. Witness Jack Collins said, "He died basically on the spot." The e-bike rider remained at the scene. No arrests were made. The article notes this intersection is known for frequent stop sign violations: "It's not a unicorn incident. It's happened a lot." The piece highlights systemic issues, including delivery app pressures and gaps in e-bike regulation. City data shows e-bikes account for less than 2% of traffic deaths, but the policy debate continues. Lawmakers have called for tighter rules, as delivery workers face incentives to rush.


8
Repeat Offender Kills Passenger In Brooklyn Crash

Mar 8 - A driver out on bail smashed into a Toyota in Bushwick. The crash killed Hayden Wallace and injured three others. The driver fled, leaving chaos behind. Police tracked him for over a year. Charges stack up, but the loss remains.

NY Daily News (March 8, 2025) reports that Christopher Seabrook, 28, was arrested after a deadly hit-and-run in Bushwick, Brooklyn. Seabrook had been out on bail for a previous crash involving police. On January 8, 2024, he crashed into a Toyota, killing Hayden Wallace and injuring three others. Seabrook fled the scene, abandoning his vehicle. The article notes, "All accidents are useless but this one was even more useless because [Seabrook] had so many other offenses." Seabrook faces 23 charges, including manslaughter, leaving the scene, unlicensed driving, and speeding. The case highlights repeated driver offenses and questions about bail and enforcement. Police needed over a year to arrest Seabrook, who had a history of fleeing crashes and driving without a license.