Crash Count for Park Slope
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 1,992
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 981
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 215
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 8
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 3
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025
Carnage in Park Slope
Killed 2
Crush Injuries 4
Lower leg/foot 3
Head 1
Severe Bleeding 2
Head 2
Severe Lacerations 2
Head 1
Lower arm/hand 1
Concussion 10
Head 4
Lower leg/foot 3
Chest 1
Lower arm/hand 1
Shoulder/upper arm 1
Whiplash 11
Neck 5
Back 3
Head 2
Whole body 1
Contusion/Bruise 69
Lower leg/foot 20
+15
Lower arm/hand 13
+8
Head 12
+7
Shoulder/upper arm 8
+3
Back 6
+1
Hip/upper leg 4
Neck 4
Chest 2
Abdomen/pelvis 1
Face 1
Abrasion 42
Lower leg/foot 17
+12
Lower arm/hand 11
+6
Shoulder/upper arm 7
+2
Head 4
Face 1
Hip/upper leg 1
Neck 1
Pain/Nausea 19
Lower leg/foot 5
Back 3
Head 3
Abdomen/pelvis 2
Lower arm/hand 2
Whole body 2
Chest 1
Hip/upper leg 1
Neck 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Sep 15, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Park Slope?

Preventable Speeding in Park Slope School Zones

(since 2022)
Park Slope Bleeds While Leaders Stall—Demand Streets That Protect People, Not Cars

Park Slope Bleeds While Leaders Stall—Demand Streets That Protect People, Not Cars

Park Slope: Jan 1, 2022 - Jul 11, 2025

The Toll in Park Slope

The streets do not forgive. Since 2022, one person has died and seven have been seriously injured in Park Slope. There have been 698 injuries in 1,459 crashes. The numbers do not flinch. They do not care if you are young or old. They only count the bodies.

Cars and SUVs hit hardest. They killed one, seriously hurt two, and left 115 more injured. Taxis took another life and broke two more bodies. Trucks and buses added seven more injuries. Bikes and mopeds, too, left their mark—eight injuries each, one serious from a bike. No one is spared. Not the old, not the young.

The Latest Wounds

The violence does not pause. In the last year, 136 people were injured in 239 crashes. Three were hurt so badly they may never walk the same. No deaths this year, but the luck will not hold. The last death was a pedestrian, struck by a taxi. She was 72. She died at the intersection. The city moved on.

Leaders: Steps and Silences

Council Member Shahana Hanif has co-sponsored bills to ban parking near crosswalks and speed up protected bike lanes. She signed on to the SAFE Streets Act. Assembly Member Robert Carroll pushed for delivery app insurance, but the bill died under corporate pressure (DoorDash lobbying sunk the bill). Senator Zellnor Myrie has backed bus lanes and congestion pricing. They have all spoken, but the blood still runs.

A witness once described the scene: “He was laid out on the floor. His head was wide open.” Another neighbor said, “They plow right through red lights, no consideration for people crossing. They just don’t care.”

What Next? Demand More

This is not fate. Every crash is a policy failure. Call your council member. Call your assembly member. Demand a 20 mph speed limit. Demand daylight at every crosswalk. Demand real protection for people, not cars.

Do not wait for the next siren. The street will not wait for you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where does Park Slope sit politically?
It belongs to borough Brooklyn, community board Brooklyn CB6, city council district District 39, assembly district AD 44 and state senate district SD 20.
What types of vehicles caused injuries and deaths to pedestrians in Park Slope?
Cars and SUVs: 1 death, 2 serious injuries, 115 total injuries. Taxis: 1 death, 2 serious injuries, 8 total injuries. Trucks and buses: 0 deaths, 0 serious injuries, 5 total injuries. Bikes: 0 deaths, 1 serious injury, 8 total injuries. Mopeds and motorcycles: 0 deaths, 0 serious injuries, 6 total injuries. Cars and SUVs are the main killers.
Are these crashes just accidents, or are they preventable?
They are preventable. Every crash is a policy failure. Lower speeds, better street design, and real enforcement save lives.
What can local politicians do to stop traffic violence?
They can lower speed limits, ban parking near crosswalks, build protected bike lanes, and hold reckless drivers accountable. They can pass and enforce laws that protect people, not just cars.
What has Council Member Hanif done for street safety?
She has co-sponsored bills to ban parking near crosswalks, speed up protected bike lanes, and supported the SAFE Streets Act.
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

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
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
Zellnor Myrie
State Senator Zellnor Myrie
District 20
District Office:
1077 Nostrand Ave. Ground Floor, Brooklyn, NY 11225
Legislative Office:
Room 806, Legislative Office Building, Albany, NY 12247
Twitter: @zellnor4ny
Other Geographies

Park Slope Park Slope sits in Brooklyn, Precinct 78, District 39, AD 44, SD 20, Brooklyn CB6.

See also
Boroughs
City Council Districts
Community Boards
State_assembly_districts
State Senate Districts

Traffic Safety Timeline for Park Slope

9
Brooklyn Hit-And-Run Kills Passenger

Apr 9 - 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 in an Uber. Police caught him soon after. Streets remain unforgiving.

Gothamist (April 9, 2025) reports that Tyree Epps, 32, was indicted after allegedly running a stop sign and crashing into a school bus in East New York, Brooklyn. The February collision killed his 26-year-old passenger, Imani Vance, and injured the bus driver. According to the Brooklyn DA, Epps "ignored a stop sign and drove at excessive speeds," then left the scene by calling an Uber, abandoning his injured passenger. The impact pushed the bus into a third, empty vehicle. No children on the bus were harmed. Epps was apprehended after fleeing on foot. The case highlights persistent dangers at intersections and the lethal consequences of ignoring traffic controls.


6
SUV Swerves From Curb, Strikes Cyclist Hard

Apr 6 - SUV pulls out on 5th Avenue. Cyclist rides south. Metal slams flesh. Rider thrown, arm bloodied. Child in back seat wails. Sirens slice the night. Unsafe lane change leaves pain behind.

A Toyota SUV pulled from the curb on 5th Avenue in Brooklyn and struck a southbound cyclist. The cyclist, a 26-year-old man, was ejected and suffered injuries to his arm. According to the police report, the crash was caused by 'Unsafe Lane Changing' and 'Passing or Lane Usage Improper.' A four-year-old child in the SUV was present and uninjured but cried after the crash. The cyclist was wearing a helmet, as noted in the report, but the primary causes were driver errors. No vehicle damage was reported. The night ended with sirens and blood on the street.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4803843 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
3
Gounardes 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
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
Simon Backs 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.


2
Brooklyn Crash Leaves Family Scarred, Three Dead

Apr 2 - A car plowed through families on Ocean Parkway. Three killed. Survivors hurt, shaken, haunted. The driver had a suspended license, dozens of violations, unpaid fines. The city’s streets failed to protect the most vulnerable. Pain lingers. Justice waits.

ABC7 reported on April 2, 2025, that a crash in Brooklyn killed a mother and her two daughters, leaving another family injured and traumatized. The article states, “Shakhzod described ongoing back pain and fears of another accident.” The driver, Miriam Yarimi, had 93 violations, $10,000 in unpaid fines, and a suspended license. She struck an Uber, then hit families crossing Ocean Parkway, flipping her vehicle. Yarimi faces charges including manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide. The crash exposes systemic failure: a driver with a long record remained on the road. Survivors suffer lasting physical and emotional wounds. The city’s enforcement and oversight remain under scrutiny.


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.


1
Gounardes 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
Gounardes Urges Action on Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill

Apr 1 - After a Brooklyn crash killed a mother and two children, lawmakers renewed calls for speed limiters on cars of repeat offenders. Assemblymember Emily Gallagher and others demand action. The bill targets drivers with long records of speeding and red-light violations.

Assemblymember Emily Gallagher, representing District 50, is pushing for the Stop Super Speeders bill, which would require speed limiters on vehicles owned by drivers with repeated speeding or red-light violations. The bill, stalled for years in Albany, gained urgency after a fatal Brooklyn crash on April 1, 2025. Gallagher, joined by State Senator Andrew Gounardes and city Comptroller Brad Lander, rallied at Borough Hall, urging swift passage. The bill targets drivers with 11 or more license points in 24 months, or six camera violations in a year. Gallagher said, 'A lot of what happens when it comes to getting a bill to the top of the list is really through a movement and folks fighting for the bill.' Gounardes added, 'It’s no longer simply enough to shake our heads in despair when these preventable tragedies occur—it’s time for us to act.' The legislation mirrors past efforts like the Dangerous Vehicle Abatement Act, aiming to hold reckless drivers accountable and protect vulnerable road users.


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
Jo Anne Simon Urges Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Technology Use

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
Myrie Urges Immediate Action on Safety Boosting Speed 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 Driver Kills Mother, Two Daughters

Mar 31 - A speeding Audi struck a mother and her daughters in a Brooklyn crosswalk. The crash killed three. The youngest son was left fighting for life. The driver, with a long record of violations, now faces manslaughter charges.

According to the New York Post (March 31, 2025), Miriam Yarimi drove her Audi through a Brooklyn crosswalk, killing Natasha Saada and her daughters, Diana and Debra. Saada’s 4-year-old son was critically injured. Police said the victims were 'legally crossing the street in a crosswalk when the driver's speeding Audi struck them.' Yarimi’s car had over 93 traffic violations. She told first responders she was 'possessed' and is undergoing psychiatric evaluation. The article notes Yarimi’s history of paranoid social media posts and erratic behavior. She has been charged with manslaughter. The crash highlights persistent dangers for pedestrians and raises questions about enforcement against repeat traffic offenders.


31
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiters for Reckless Drivers

Mar 31 - After a deadly Brooklyn crash, lawmakers push a bill to force speed limiters on cars of repeat reckless drivers. The devices would cap speed, targeting those with long records of violations. The aim: stop killers behind the wheel.

Bill to mandate speed limiters for repeat reckless drivers was introduced after a fatal Brooklyn crash. The measure, announced March 31, 2025, would require drivers with 11+ license points in two years or six camera tickets in a year to install speed-control devices for one year. The bill is sponsored by State Senator Andrew Gounardes and Assembly Member Emily Gallagher. Gounardes said, 'My legislation would require repeat reckless drivers to install speed limiters, so they can no longer use their vehicles as a deadly weapon.' Gallagher added, 'We have the tools and the knowledge to prevent these tragedies from happening.' Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso and Families for Safe Streets support the bill, calling it a powerful tool to protect everyone from super speeders. The bill awaits committee action.


30
Gounardes Supports Safety Boosting Speed Limiter Bill

Mar 30 - A reckless driver with a long record ran a red light on Ocean Parkway. She killed a mother and two children. The crash left another child fighting for life. Advocates demand action. The system failed to stop a known danger.

On March 30, 2025, police charged Miriam Yarimi after she sped through a red light on Ocean Parkway, killing Natasha Saada and her two daughters, ages 5 and 8. The crash also left a 4-year-old boy in critical condition. Yarimi faces manslaughter, negligent homicide, assault, reckless driving, and more. Her license was suspended. Her car had 99 violations in a year, including 21 speeding and five red-light tickets. Advocates, including Ben Furnas of Transportation Alternatives, blame Albany’s delay in passing Senator Andrew Gounardes’s bill to require speed-limiting devices for repeat offenders. Furnas said, “If Albany had passed this bill when it was first introduced, this vehicle would already have been speed limited and this crash would never have happened.” The bill remains pending. Advocates will rally at the crash site, demanding urgent action to protect lives.


30
Mother And Daughters Killed On Ocean Parkway

Mar 30 - A driver sped down Ocean Parkway, slammed into a Camry, then struck a mother and her three children in the crosswalk. Three died. The youngest clings to life. The Audi’s driver had a suspended license. The street ran red with grief.

ABC7 reported on March 30, 2025, that a multi-vehicle crash on Ocean Parkway in Midwood killed Natasha Saada and her daughters, ages 5 and 8, and critically injured her 4-year-old son. The article states, "A driver has been charged after a multi-vehicle crash in Brooklyn killed a mother and her two young daughters and critically injured her son." Police say Miriam Yarimi, driving an Audi with a suspended license, rear-ended a Toyota Camry and then struck the family in the crosswalk. Yarimi faces charges including manslaughter, reckless driving, and failing to yield. The Camry was an Uber with children inside, who were also hurt. NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch called it "a horrific tragedy caused by someone who shouldn't have been on the road." The crash highlights the lethal risk posed by unlicensed, reckless drivers and the vulnerability of families crossing city streets.


29
SUV Turns Right Strikes Brooklyn Pedestrian

Mar 29 - A 25-year-old man suffered full-body injuries after an SUV making a right turn hit him outside an intersection on 6 Ave in Brooklyn. The pedestrian was conscious but fractured and dislocated limbs. Police cited driver inexperience as a key factor.

According to the police report, the crash occurred at 12:16 on 6 Ave in Brooklyn. A 25-year-old male pedestrian was injured when a 2021 Mazda SUV, traveling northeast and making a right turn, struck him at the left rear quarter panel. The pedestrian was not in the roadway and was conscious but suffered injuries to his entire body, including fractures and dislocations. The report explicitly lists 'Driver Inexperience' as a contributing factor to the crash. The pedestrian was not cited with any contributing factors. The collision involved multiple vehicles, including a sedan with front-end damage, but the primary impact was from the SUV’s turn. This incident highlights the dangers posed by inexperienced drivers executing turns in areas with pedestrian presence.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4802191 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19
29
Mother And Children Killed On Ocean Parkway

Mar 29 - A car struck a mother and her two daughters in a Brooklyn crosswalk. All three died. A young boy fights for life. The driver’s license was suspended. The Audi hit another car, then pedestrians. Ocean Parkway’s danger is no secret.

According to ABC7 (published March 29, 2025), a 34-year-old woman and her two daughters, ages six and eight, were killed when an Audi, driven by Mariam Yarimi on a suspended license, rear-ended a Toyota Camry and then struck the family in a crosswalk on Ocean Parkway. A four-year-old boy remains in critical condition. Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch called it 'a horrific tragedy caused by someone who shouldn't have been on the road.' The Audi went airborne after the collision. Residents described chronic speeding and red-light running on Ocean Parkway. Authorities are investigating whether speed or a red light violation contributed. No arrests have been made. The crash highlights persistent systemic dangers for pedestrians on city streets.


24
SUV Right Turn Hits Pedestrian at Intersection

Mar 24 - A 40-year-old woman crossing with signal was struck by an SUV making a right turn on 7 Ave in Brooklyn. The driver’s limited view contributed to the collision. The pedestrian suffered a concussion and arm injuries but remained conscious.

According to the police report, the crash occurred at 8:23 AM on 7 Ave near Union St in Brooklyn. A Ford SUV, traveling east and making a right turn, struck a 40-year-old female pedestrian who was crossing with the signal at the intersection. The report cites 'View Obstructed/Limited' as a contributing factor, indicating the driver failed to see the pedestrian in time. The pedestrian sustained a concussion and injuries to her elbow, lower arm, and hand, but remained conscious. The vehicle showed no damage, suggesting a low-speed impact. The driver was licensed and operating the vehicle legally. No pedestrian errors were noted as contributing factors. This collision underscores the dangers posed by limited driver visibility during turning maneuvers in urban intersections.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4801284 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-09-19