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Boy, 3, in Stroller Is Killed at Intersection in East Harlem Boy, 3, in Stroller Is Killed at Intersection in East Harlem
(32 minutes later)
A 3-year-old boy was killed and his mother injured after they were struck by a pickup truck while crossing the street in Manhattan on Monday morning, officials said. It was a dreary morning, but the mother still put her 3-year-old son in a stroller draped with a teal rain cover and headed out for a coffee and bagel in their East Harlem neighborhood.
The mother, who lives in the area, was pushing her son in a stroller at the intersection of 116th Street and First Avenue in East Harlem. The two were crossing First Avenue when a driver in a blue Ford F-250 truck turned left, striking them, the police said. As was her ritual, she went to the Dunkin’ Donuts just blocks from her home. She sipped on her coffee and ordered some hash browns for her child, according to a worker there.
“She was on the floor with the baby, holding the baby, blood all over,” said Marisol Medina, 51, who works at a nearby Dunkin’ Donuts and recognized the mother as a regular customer. After, as mother and child crossed First Avenue at East 116th Street, a driver in a blue Ford pickup truck turned left, striking her and her son in his stroller, the police said.
The tragedy comes as pedestrian deaths in New York City have increased slightly this year despite Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration working to make the streets safer. The city saw a record low in traffic fatalities in 2018. Her son, Bertin DeJesus, was killed.
Pedestrians accounted for more than half of the traffic deaths in 2019, with 104 killed compared to 101 in the same period last year, the city’s Department of Transportation said. In an alarming increase, 27 cyclists had been killed by vehicles this year, as of Sunday, compared to just 10 in the same period last year. After the collision, the mother was on the street with her son, sobbing and speaking loudly in Spanish, said Marisol Medina, who works at the Dunkin’ Donuts.
“She was crying, ‘I want my baby. I want to help my baby,’” Ms. Medina, 51, said.
While the statistics are preliminary, the death of the 3-year-old boy, Bertin DeJesus, on Monday brings the number of people killed by vehicles so far this year to 203. That is the same number as all of 2018, even with three weeks left in 2019. The mother, who has not yet been publicly identified, had minor injuries.
Recently, New York seemed to be bucking a national trend: In the United States, more pedestrians and cyclists were killed last year than in any year since 1990, according to a report released by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The deaths had risen significantly in urban areas. Bertin was the sixth child pedestrian to be killed on city streets in 2019, according to city data.
The city has been making progress toward reducing traffic deaths by providing safety upgrades, like so-called pedestrian head-starts at crosswalks, and reorienting what some safety advocates have called a car-dominated road culture. Among the six were two killed in September: a 10-year-old boy waiting for a bus in Brooklyn and a 1-year-old girl in a stroller in the Bronx who were killed, one week apart, when drivers lost control of their vehicles.
Bertin was also the 104th pedestrian to be killed by a vehicle so far in 2019, compared to 101 in the same period last year. The slight increase in pedestrian deaths comes despite work and progress made by Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration and the City Council as they focus on making the streets safer.
Last year, traffic fatalities in New York hit a record low, with 203 people killed by vehicles. With Bertin’s death on Monday, that number was equaled for 2019, but with three weeks still left in the year.
As of Sunday, pedestrians accounted for more than half of the traffic deaths in 2019 so far, the city’s Department of Transportation said. In an alarming increase, 27 cyclists had been killed by vehicles this year, as of Sunday, compared to just 10 in the same period last year.
In the last few years, New York seemed to be bucking a national trend: In the United States, more pedestrians and cyclists were killed last year than in any year since 1990, according to a report released by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
While the deaths had risen significantly in urban areas across the country, they had fallen consistently in recent years in New York. The city has been making progress toward reducing traffic deaths by providing safety upgrades, like so-called pedestrian head-starts at crosswalks, and reorienting what some safety advocates have called a car-dominated road culture.
Danny Harris, the executive director of Transportation Alternatives, a bicycle and pedestrian safety advocacy group, said the boy’s death had been “preventable” and that “we need immediate action to ensure that all New Yorkers have safe, equitable and dignified transportation alternatives.”
On Twitter, the mayor called crash “a tragedy” and said there would be a full investigation.
Mr. de Blasio has made street safety one of his key initiatives, and under a plan known as Vision Zero, his administration aimed to eliminate all traffic deaths by 2024.Mr. de Blasio has made street safety one of his key initiatives, and under a plan known as Vision Zero, his administration aimed to eliminate all traffic deaths by 2024.
On Twitter, the mayor called Monday’s crash “a tragedy” and vowed a full investigation. The driver, Jaime Sabogal, 59, of Yonkers, N.Y., was arrested shortly after the collision, the police said. He was charged with aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, failure to yield to a pedestrian and failure to exercise due care.
The driver in Monday’s crash, a 59-year-old man who has not been publicly identified, was expected to be arrested and charged later on Monday, a police spokesman said.
Ms. Medina said she felt that the street corner where the crash took place was particularly dangerous for pedestrians.Ms. Medina said she felt that the street corner where the crash took place was particularly dangerous for pedestrians.
“People around here,” she said, “they speed all the time.”“People around here,” she said, “they speed all the time.”
Both the mother and her son were in the shop where Ms. Medina works before the crash. The mother, who has not yet been publicly identified, ordered two bagels with cream cheese, hash browns and coffee, according to Ms. Medina. After the crash, Ms. Medina went onto the street. The mother “was on the floor with the baby, holding the baby, blood all over,” she said.
After they were struck, Ms. Medina went onto the street, where she saw the mother crying and saying in Spanish, “I want my baby, I want to help my baby.” The driver was distraught, Ms. Medina said.
The driver appeared distraught, Ms. Medina said.
“He started banging himself on the head like he couldn’t believe that he did that,” she said.“He started banging himself on the head like he couldn’t believe that he did that,” she said.
Bertin and his mother were rushed to Metropolitan Hospital Center in East Harlem, where he was pronounced dead, fire and police officials said. His mother was in stable condition and had not suffered serious injuries, officials said. Bertin and his mother were rushed to Metropolitan Hospital Center in East Harlem, where he was pronounced dead, fire and police officials said. His mother was in stable condition, officials said.
Officers spent hours investigating the scene of the crash. As they worked, a stroller draped with a teal rain cover remained in the crosswalk. As it rained on Monday, officers spent hours at the scene of the crash in East Harlem, surrounding the intersection in police tape. Bertin’s stroller remained abandoned in the crosswalk.
The crash on Monday followed a weekend in the city marked by several other crashes. Early on Sunday, a 23-year-old woman was killed in the East Flatbush area of Brooklyn after the car she was in rolled through a stop sign and another car slammed into it, the police said. Bertin’s death on Monday followed a weekend in the city marked by several other notable crashes. Early on Sunday, a 23-year-old woman was killed in the East Flatbush area of Brooklyn after the car she was in rolled through a stop sign and another car slammed into it, the police said.
An off-duty police officer was arrested in connection with that crash and initially charged with criminally negligent homicide, vehicular manslaughter, reckless driving, speeding and driving while impaired by alcohol, the police said.An off-duty police officer was arrested in connection with that crash and initially charged with criminally negligent homicide, vehicular manslaughter, reckless driving, speeding and driving while impaired by alcohol, the police said.
The evening before, seven people were injured, including several pedestrians, in a multiple-car crash in Manhattan, according to the police.The evening before, seven people were injured, including several pedestrians, in a multiple-car crash in Manhattan, according to the police.
Kwame Opam contributed reporting.