Crash Count for Fort Hamilton
Crashes: Collisions involving cars, bikes, and pedestrians. 370
All Injuries: Any injury from a reported crash. 220
Moderate: Broken bones, concussions, and other serious injuries. 22
Serious: Life-altering injuries: amputations, paralysis, severe trauma. 0
Deaths: Lives lost to traffic violence. 2
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Nov 5, 2025
Carnage in Fort Hamilton
Detailed breakdowns aren’t yet available for this year slice; totals below reflect the selected window.
Killed 2
Whiplash 4
Head 2
Chest 1
Neck 1
Whole body 1
Contusion/Bruise 6
Lower arm/hand 2
Lower leg/foot 2
Shoulder/upper arm 2
Head 1
Abrasion 3
Head 1
Lower arm/hand 1
Lower leg/foot 1
Pain/Nausea 1
Head 1
Data from Jan 1, 2022 to Nov 5, 2025

Who’s Injuring and Killing Pedestrians in Fort Hamilton?

Belt Parkway at 1 AM, then another call to 911

Belt Parkway at 1 AM, then another call to 911

Fort Hamilton: Jan 1, 2022 - Oct 31, 2025

Just after 1 AM on Sep 5, 2025, a 27-year-old driver was hurt on the Belt Parkway. Police logged “Pavement Slippery” and an abrasion to her arm and hand. NYC Open Data

This Week

  • Sep 5, 2025 — Belt Parkway: a driver in an SUV was injured; police recorded a slippery roadway. NYC Open Data
  • Jun 25, 2025 — near 800 Poly Pl: two cars crashed; an 83-year-old driver was injured. NYC Open Data

Two dead here since 2022

Since Jan 1, 2022, Fort Hamilton has seen 369 crashes, 218 injured, 2 killed. NYC Open Data

One of the dead was a person walking. On Jun 12, 2024, on Dahlgren Place at 92 Street, police recorded the driver of a lift truck turning right and failing to yield. The pedestrian, 86, died. NYC Open Data: CrashID 4732463

Where the hurt keeps coming

Injuries stack up on the Belt Parkway. Poly Place and Dahlgren Place show up as trouble spots. NYC Open Data

Afternoons and evenings hit hard. The injury counts peak around 1 PM, 6 PM, and 8 PM in this area. NYC Open Data

What would help here is not theory. Try hardened right turns and daylighting at Dahlgren Place. Give people crossing room to be seen with longer leading intervals and fresh markings at Poly Place. Aim targeted enforcement on the Belt’s access points when injuries spike.

The record on action — and inaction

Your Council Member is David M. Carr. He co-sponsored a law forcing DOT to lay down pavement markings fast after repaving — a simple fix that cuts confusion. NYC Council – Int 1160-2025

Your Assembly Member is Alec Brook-Krasny. He voted against renewing the city’s school-zone speed cameras. Streetsblog NYC

Your State Senator is Jessica Scarcella-Spanton. She voted no on those cameras — and voted yes in committee on a bill to force repeat speeders to use speed‑limiters. Streetsblog NYC | Open States: S 4045

The path is clear. Keep cameras on. Pass the bill that stops the worst repeat speeders. Then slow every street that keeps taking blood.

What needs to happen now

  • Lower speeds on local streets. Use the tools the city already has. /take_action/
  • Pass the speed‑limiter bill for habitual speeders: S 4045. Open States
  • Back it up with simple street fixes at Dahlgren Place and Poly Place.

The night on the Belt was one call. The ledger here runs long. It does not close itself.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happened in the past month?
A 27-year-old driver was injured on the Belt Parkway just after 1 AM on Sep 5, 2025. Police recorded a slippery roadway. Another crash near 800 Poly Pl on Jun 25, 2025 injured an 83-year-old driver. NYC Open Data
How bad is it in Fort Hamilton since 2022?
From Jan 1, 2022 through Oct 30, 2025, there were 369 crashes, 218 injuries, and 2 deaths in Fort Hamilton. NYC Open Data
Where are the worst spots?
The Belt Parkway racks up injuries. Poly Place and Dahlgren Place also stand out. One person walking was killed at Dahlgren Place at 92 Street on Jun 12, 2024. NYC Open Data: CrashID 4732463
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.
How were these numbers calculated?
We used NYC Open Data’s Motor Vehicle Collisions datasets (Crashes, Persons, Vehicles) filtered to Fort Hamilton (NTA BK1061) and the period 2022-01-01 to 2025-10-30. We counted total crashes, injuries, and deaths, and reviewed records for locations (e.g., Belt Parkway, Poly Place, Dahlgren Place) and times of day. Data were accessed Oct 30, 2025. You can view the filtered query here.

Citations

Citations

Other Representatives

Assembly Member Alec Brook-Krasny

District 46

Council Member David M. Carr

District 50

State Senator Jessica Scarcella-Spanton

District 23

Other Geographies

Fort Hamilton Fort Hamilton sits in Brooklyn, Precinct 68, District 50, AD 46, SD 23, Brooklyn CB10.

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

Traffic Safety Timeline for Fort Hamilton

9
Loose Board Smashes Car Windshield On Bridge

Mar 9 - A wooden board flew off a truck on the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge. It smashed through a car’s windshield. Glass rained down on the family inside. The driver, shaken but steady, steered blind and pulled over. No one reported injuries. Danger passed, barely.

The New York Post (March 9, 2025) reports a near-disaster on the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge. High winds sent a wooden board flying from a pickup truck into David Deng’s windshield. Dashcam footage shows the board shattering glass across Deng and his family. Deng told the outlet, "I was in complete shock," and described glass covering their clothes and seats. The truck driver had stopped earlier, apparently trying to secure the load. The incident highlights the risk of unsecured cargo on city bridges. No police report was filed at the time. The event underscores the persistent threat loose debris poses to all road users.


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.


3
Dump Truck Kills Pedestrian In Williamsburg

Mar 3 - A dump truck turned right on Withers Street. It struck a man crouched in the road. The driver fled. The man died at Elmhurst Hospital. Police are still investigating. Brooklyn’s streets claim more lives. The toll grows.

Gothamist reported on March 3, 2025, that a dump truck driver fatally struck a man in his 20s on Withers Street near Woodpoint Road in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. The man was 'crouched in the street to pick up food' when the northbound truck turned right and hit him, according to NYPD officials. The driver, a 49-year-old man, left the scene. No arrests have been made. The NYPD's Collision Investigation Squad is investigating. The article notes this crash followed two other recent fatal collisions in Brooklyn. The incident underscores persistent dangers for pedestrians and ongoing issues with drivers leaving crash scenes. NYPD data shows at least 10 traffic deaths in Brooklyn so far this year, matching last year’s pace.


2
Unlicensed Driver Flees Fatal Brooklyn Crash

Mar 2 - A man sped through a stop sign in Brownsville. His Mercedes hit a school bus. His passenger died. He ran from the wreck in a taxi. Police found him later. The victim’s family mourns. The street remains unchanged.

NY Daily News reported on March 2, 2025, that Tyree Epps, 32, drove a Mercedes-Benz without a license, ran a stop sign on Van Sinderen Ave, and crashed into a school bus. The article states, “After the crash, Epps hopped in a taxi and took off, leaving his 26-year-old passenger, Imani Vance, in the front seat suffering severe head trauma.” Epps faces charges of manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, leaving the scene, and unlicensed driving. The bus driver survived. The crash exposes ongoing risks from unlicensed, reckless drivers and the persistent danger at city intersections. The victim’s family is left to grieve and organize a funeral, while the intersection remains a site of loss.


1
Bushwick Hit-And-Run Kills Passenger

Mar 1 - A Kia slammed into a Toyota on Stockholm Street. Hayden Wallace, 29, died. Two friends survived with critical wounds. The driver fled. Police arrested Christopher Seabrook. The crash left a new life cut short, a city shaken.

According to the NY Daily News (published March 1, 2025), Christopher Seabrook, 28, was arrested for the hit-and-run crash that killed Hayden Wallace, 29, in Bushwick on January 8, 2024. Seabrook allegedly crashed a Kia Sportage into a Toyota Yaris carrying Wallace and friends, then fled the scene on foot. Wallace died; two others were critically injured. The Toyota’s driver was also charged with driving without a license. Seabrook faces charges including manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, and leaving the scene. The article quotes Wallace’s aunt: “He lived life to the fullest. He was only 29 years old and lit up every room he entered.” The case highlights the deadly consequences of reckless driving and fleeing crash scenes in New York City.


18
BMW Skids, Slams Tree On Belt Parkway

Feb 18 - A BMW X5 veered off Belt Parkway near Exit 14. The SUV struck a tree. Marcus Joseph, 41, died at the scene. No passengers. No bystanders hurt. The crash left only silence and wreckage on the Brooklyn road.

NY Daily News (2025-02-18) reports Marcus Joseph, 41, died after his BMW X5 spun out of control on the Belt Parkway near Exit 14 in Starrett City, Brooklyn. Police said the SUV 'skidded off the road and slammed into a tree.' Joseph was pronounced dead at the scene. No other injuries were reported. The article does not mention weather or road conditions. The incident highlights the dangers of high-speed corridors like the Belt Parkway, where loss of control can prove fatal. No charges were filed. The report underscores the persistent risks for all road users on New York City highways.


13
Int 1160-2025 Carr votes yes on pavement markings bill, boosting street safety citywide.

Feb 13 - Council orders DOT to repaint pavement lines within five days after resurfacing. Delays must be explained to the public. Clear markings mean fewer deadly gaps for walkers and riders.

Int 1160-2025, now enacted, passed the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and full Council in February 2025. The law demands the Department of Transportation install pavement markings or temporary lines within five business days after any street resurfacing. If DOT misses the deadline, it must notify the public and explain the delay. The bill’s matter title: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installing pavement markings.' Council Member Farah N. Louis led as primary sponsor, joined by Brannan, Schulman, Banks, Farías, Carr, and Ariola. The law took effect March 15, 2025. Timely markings close the deadly window when streets lack crosswalks and lanes, protecting people on foot and bike.


26
Elderly Woman Killed Crossing Cropsey Avenue

Jan 26 - A cargo van turned left on Cropsey Avenue. It struck Mayya Gil, 95, and her aide. Gil died. The aide survived. No charges for the driver. Another senior lost to city traffic. The street remains dangerous for the old and frail.

Gothamist (2025-01-26) reports that Mayya Gil, 95, was killed while crossing Cropsey Avenue in Brooklyn with her home health aide. According to the NYPD, 'a man driving a cargo van struck both of them while making a left turn.' Gil died from her injuries; her aide was hospitalized. Police did not arrest or charge the driver. The article notes that Gil was the second elderly pedestrian killed in Brooklyn this year, and cites Transportation Alternatives: '46 senior pedestrians were killed in car crashes across the city last year.' The crash highlights the ongoing risk seniors face on city streets, especially at intersections where turning vehicles endanger those crossing on foot.


21
S 2622 Scarcella-Spanton sponsors bill to repeal congestion pricing, reducing street safety citywide.

Jan 21 - Senator Scarcella-Spanton pushes S 2622. The bill kills congestion pricing, adds an MTA board seat, and orders a forensic audit. Streets risk more cars. Riders and walkers face louder, dirtier roads.

Senate bill S 2622 was introduced on January 21, 2025, and is in the sponsorship stage. The bill, titled 'Relates to repealing congestion pricing (Part A); commissioning an independent audit of the metropolitan transportation authority (Part B); and conducting an environmental impact study (Part C),' was sponsored by Senator Jessica Scarcella-Spanton (District 23). The bill repeals congestion pricing, expands the MTA board, and mandates a forensic audit. No safety analyst has assessed the impact, but repealing congestion pricing means more traffic and danger for New York’s most vulnerable on the street.


16
SUV Rear-Ends Sedan on Belt Parkway

Jan 16 - A distracted SUV driver struck a sedan from behind on Belt Parkway. The impact injured a 3-year-old passenger in the SUV, causing shoulder and upper arm contusions. The child was restrained and conscious after the crash.

According to the police report, the collision occurred on Belt Parkway around 6 p.m. A 2014 SUV traveling west struck the right rear quarter panel of a 2022 sedan also traveling west. The report cites 'Driver Inattention/Distraction' as a contributing factor. The SUV carried eight occupants, including a 3-year-old male passenger seated in the right rear, who sustained contusions to the shoulder and upper arm. The child was restrained with a lap belt and harness and remained conscious. The point of impact was the SUV's center back end and the sedan's right front bumper. No other driver errors or victim behaviors were noted. The crash highlights the dangers of driver distraction leading to rear-end impacts on high-speed roadways.


  • Motor Vehicle Collisions – CrashID 4786291 - Crashes, Persons, Vehicles , NYC Open Data, Accessed 2025-11-09
16
Scarcella-Spanton Opposes Misguided NYPD Congestion Toll Exemptions

Jan 16 - Reinvent Albany blasted a bill to exempt NYPD officers from Manhattan congestion tolls. The group called it unfair, a $22 million giveaway to a powerful few. They warned it would drain funds, raise tolls, and reward special interests over public safety.

On January 16, 2025, Reinvent Albany, a good government watchdog, issued a statement opposing a bill from Assembly Member Stacey Pheffer Amato and Senator Jessica Scarcella-Spanton. The bill seeks to exempt NYPD officers, even off-duty, from paying congestion pricing tolls in Manhattan’s central business district. Reinvent Albany called the measure 'contrary to notions of basic fairness' and a '$22 million handout' to a special interest. The Traffic Mobility Review Board had already rejected such exemptions. The group warned that multiple exemption bills could cost the public $100 million yearly and force higher tolls for everyone else. Neither Pheffer Amato nor Scarcella-Spanton commented. The watchdog urged lawmakers to serve the many, not the powerful few.


8
Int 1160-2025 Carr co-sponsors bill to speed up pavement markings, boosting street safety.

Jan 8 - Council orders DOT to repaint pavement lines within five days after resurfacing. Delays must be explained to the public. Clear markings mean fewer deadly crossings for walkers and riders.

Int 1160-2025, now enacted by the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, forces the Department of Transportation to install pavement markings or temporary lines within five business days after any street resurfacing. The bill, sponsored by Farah N. Louis (primary) and co-sponsored by Brannan, Schulman, Banks, Farías, Carr, Ariola, and others, passed on March 15, 2025. The law demands annual reporting on compliance and reasons for any delay. The matter title reads: 'A Local Law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to installing pavement markings.' Quick, visible lines cut confusion and protect people crossing or riding. The law took effect immediately.


1
Audi Driver Drags Man Half Mile

Jan 1 - A white Audi struck Michael Foster on Caton Avenue. The car dragged him for blocks. The driver never stopped. Foster died in the street. The Audi vanished into the night. No arrests. The city’s danger stays.

NY Daily News reported on January 1, 2025, that Michael Foster, 64, was killed after a white Audi hit him on Caton Ave. near Flatbush Ave. in Brooklyn. The driver, described as speeding, dragged Foster for half a mile before leaving him near Linden Blvd. and Nostrand Ave. The article quotes a witness: "I saw him at the stop light. He would go out to the cars and beg for change." The driver fled the scene and has not been caught. No arrests have been made. The incident highlights the lethal risk for pedestrians in city streets and the ongoing issue of hit-and-run drivers evading responsibility.