Tuesday, July 23, 2024

DRIVER WITH SUSPENDED LICENSE INDICTED FOR STRIKING E-BIKER WHILE FLEEING POLICE

 

Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz announced that Harold Vega was indicted by a grand jury on charges of assault, leaving the scene of an incident and other related crimes after allegedly slamming into an e-bike rider while fleeing police in Astoria on July 3. Vega allegedly ran through 26 red lights and 14 stop signs while weaving in and out of traffic. During the incident, the defendant allegedly struck the bicyclist, which launched the victim into the air and caused him to sustain severe head trauma. The victim remains hospitalized.

District Attorney Katz said: “This was a high-speed chase in the very busy neighborhood of Astoria, which endangered the lives of every single person on the street. In order to evade police, Harold Vega blew through 26 red lights and 14 stop signs, drove against traffic and on the sidewalk, and through crowded streets at unsafe speeds on a hot summer afternoon. During the pursuit the defendant struck an innocent bicyclist who had the right of way, leaving a husband and father in critical condition with severe head trauma. The defendant’s alleged disregard for the rules of the road is shocking.”

Vega, 46, of Jackson Avenue in the Bronx, was arraigned today on a 13-count grand jury indictment charging him with assault in the first degree; reckless endangerment in the first degree; assault in the second degree; unlawful fleeing a police officer in a motor vehicle in the second degree; leaving the scene of an accident without reporting; resisting arrest; criminal possession of a controlled substance in the seventh degree; reckless driving; aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle in the second degree; operating a motor vehicle or permitting it to be operated in this state without having in full force financial security; operating or driving a motor vehicle without a license; operating or driving an unregistered motor vehicle; and driving without proper license plates.

Queens Supreme Court Justice Michael Hartofilis continued remand and set a return date of September 4. If convicted of the top count, Vega faces a potential maximum sentence of 25 years in prison.

According to the charges:

  • On July 3, at approximately 4:33 p.m., an officer from the 114th Precinct observed a Gray 2003 Nissan Altima with a tinted cover obstructing its license plate at the intersection of 36th Avenue and 21st
  • Upon doing a computer check, the officer learned that the license plate attached to the vehicle belonged to a different car.
  • The officer attempted to conduct a traffic stop by activating lights and sirens on his unmarked police vehicle at which point Vega stopped for approximately four seconds before he entered the intersection against a steady red light, made a U-turn and sped away.
  • During the car chase that followed, the officer observed Vega speed through 25 additional steady red lights, 14 stop signs, drive against the flow of traffic, disregard double yellow lines, weave in and out of traffic, nearly strike multiple pedestrians, and drive onto the sidewalk to evade capture.
  • When Vega drove through a steady red light at 31st Avenue and Crescent Street, he struck the victim, Arturo Aguirre Matias, who was riding an electric bicycle with pedals on Crescent Street. The victim was riding inside the marked bike lane with the flow of traffic and a green traffic signal in his favor.
  • Vega did not stop and proceeded to drive recklessly until he collided with a parked car so forcefully that the airbags deployed.
  • The entire vehicle chase spanned approximately 11 minutes through residential and commercial areas, including the blocks around Astoria Park on a hot summer afternoon.
  • After Vega collided with the parked car he then fled on foot and was confronted by good Samaritans, who slowed him down enough that police could catch up to him near 24th Drive and 23rd Vega resisted arrest when police tried to handcuff him.
  • The victim was transported to a local hospital where he continues to receive treatment for severe head trauma as a result of the collision.
  • At the 114 Precinct, police recovered one glassine enveloped containing a quantity of cocaine from Vega’s pants pocket.
  • At the time of the incident, the defendant’s driver’s license was suspended, the car he was operating was unregistered and uninsured, and the defendant had been convicted of the crime of unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle in the preceding 18 months.

The investigation was conducted by members of the District Attorney’s Vehicular Homicide Unit as well as the NYPD’s Collision Investigation Squad.

Iranian National Extradited to United States for Alleged Scheme to Illicitly Ship Sophisticated Electronics to Iran


Iranian national Saeid Haji Agha Mousaei, 53, made his initial appearance yesterday in Chicago federal court following his extradition from the United Kingdom to face charges for his role in a years-long conspiracy to evade U.S. export restrictions and transship advanced U.S. electronic testing technology to Iran using third-party countries.

According to court documents, Mousaei was a manager of Dubai-based defendant company Millennium Product Company LLC (MPC). As alleged, from in or about January 2014 through at least August 2018, Mousaei, MPC and others, devised and participated in a scheme to obtain controlled electronics with military applications, including signals equipment like oscilloscopes and spectrum analyzers, for export and re-export to Iran.

As alleged, Mousaei and his co-defendants understood export restrictions on U.S.-origin goods to prohibited destinations like Iran and falsely represented to U.S. distributors that their purchases would remain in countries other than Iran, like the United Arab Emirates (UAE) or Armenia, where the defendants controlled unnamed companies. In reality, after arranging for distributors of U.S.-origin goods to export shipments to the UAE, the defendants allegedly transshipped goods from the UAE to Iran without the required license and in violation of U.S. law.

Mousaei and MPC are each charged with conspiracy to defraud the United States, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison; smuggling goods from the United States, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison; wire fraud, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison. Mousaei was arrested in the United Kingdom on Jan. 24, 2023, pursuant to an Interpol diffusion notice.

Assistant Attorney General Matthew G. Olsen of the Justice Department’s National Security Division, Acting U.S. Attorney Morris Pasqual for the Northern District of Illinois, Executive Assistant Director Robert R. Wells of the FBI’s National Security Branch and Assistant Secretary for Export Enforcement Matthew S. Axelrod of the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) made the announcement.

The FBI and BIS are investigating the case.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Shawn D. McCarthy for the Northern District of Illinois and Trial Attorney Emma Ellenrieder of the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section are prosecuting the case.

The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs provided valuable assistance in securing the extradition of Mousaei from the United Kingdom.

This prosecution is being coordinated through the Disruptive Technology Strike Force, an interagency law enforcement strike force co-led by the Departments of Justice and Commerce designed to target illicit actors, protect supply chains, and prevent critical technology from being acquired by authoritarian regimes and hostile nation states. Under the leadership of the Assistant Attorney General for National Security and the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Export Enforcement, the Strike Force leverages tools and authorities across the U.S. Government to enhance the criminal and administrative enforcement of export control laws.

An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. 

BRONX MAN SENTENCED TO 25 YEARS TO LIFE IN PRISON FOR FATALLY SHOOTING A MAN WALKING WITH HIS YOUNG DAUGHTER

 

Victim Was Walking Hand-In-Hand with Six-Year-Old Girl; Murder Was Part of a Cycle of Retaliatory Shootings 

Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark today announced that a Bronx man has been sentenced to 25 years to life in prison for second-degree Murder in the drive-by shooting of a man walking with his young daughter in the summer of 2020. 

District Attorney Clark said, “The defendant, who was seeking retaliation for a prior shooting, drove up to the victim in a car with several accomplices in broad daylight and opened fire. A father is dead and his six-year-old-daughter, who was just inches away from receiving the same fate, lives with the trauma. The defendant has been held accountable and will spend many years in prison.” 

District Attorney Clark said the defendant, Davon Delks, 25 of East 171st Street was sentenced today by Bronx Supreme Court Justice Margaret Clancy to 25 years to life in prison. The defendant was found guilty by a jury on March 26, 2024, of second-degree Murder.

According to the facts presented at trial, on July 5, 2020, Delks and several accomplices were in a car following Anthony Robinson, 29, as he walked with his six-year-old daughter on East 170th Street near Sheridan Avenue, to avenge a shooting from the day before that involved Robinson’s brother. Delks fired a gun from the car, striking and killing Robinson.

District Attorney Clark thanked Detective Patrick Sullivan of the Bronx Homicide Squad, Detective Vincent Figueroa of the 44th Precinct, staff of the Video Unit of the Bronx District Attorney’s Office and the professional staff members of the Homicide Bureau. 

Governor Hochul Celebrates Wells Enterprises’ Significantly Expanded $425 Million Investment at its Dunkirk Ice Cream Manufacturing Facility

Governor Hochul scoops ice cream.

Expanded Project Will Increase Capacity, Support Innovation and Enable Chocolate Ingredient Manufacturing

New Manufacturing Facility Will Support the Creation of 270 New Jobs to Produce Ice Cream and Frozen Novelty Products

New York State Investments Further Support Governor Hochul’s Commitment to Grow and Strengthen the Advanced Manufacturing Sector 


Governor Kathy Hochul today, joined by company leadership, employees and community stakeholders, announced that Wells Enterprises is significantly expanding its state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in Dunkirk. The now $425 million project will increase capacity of its current ice cream production, create new capabilities for future innovation, and add a first-of-its-kind chocolate manufacturing facility within the plant to use for ingredients in its ice cream and novelty products. This investment will enable the company to add 270 new jobs and retain approximately 380 full-time jobs. It will be one of the largest single private investments ever made in Chautauqua County. New York State is supporting the project with up to $12 million in Excelsior Jobs Program tax credits and a $6 million grant from Empire State Development in exchange for job creation and capital investment commitments. The County of Chautauqua Industrial Development Agency is also working with the management team of Wells to provide support that will expedite the project.

“We are building momentum in Chautauqua County’s manufacturing sector, with multiple companies growing and creating hundreds of new jobs in Dunkirk and the region,” Governor Hochul said. “The expansion of the Wells Enterprises is an important win, and we're transforming a struggling plant into a high-tech facility that will benefit New York workers, local business partners, and the region’s hard-working dairy farmers."

The new Dunkirk facility will be about 350,000 square feet, more than doubling its current footprint. The facility’s production capabilities are expected to increase output to more than four times their current production to support the company’s growth in novelty and packaged ice cream. The newly announced expansion plans include all new production lines, more than doubling the number of manufacturing lines with high-output capabilities, creating new innovation capabilities, a new chocolate ingredient manufacturing facility, and best-in-class breakrooms, offices, and facilities designed to provide the best working environment for their team. Construction has already begun on the new facility. Wells is continuing to manufacture ice cream products in the existing facility while construction is underway.

The company’s growth will also benefit the dairy industry in the northeast. The planned expansion will continue to utilize millions of pounds of dairy annually. That number is expected to grow along with the overall consumption of ice cream. Fortune Business Insights estimates the global ice cream market will reach $132.32 billion in 2032, up from $76.11 billion in 2023 and reflecting the overall increase in the world’s craving for ice cream.

New York State has nearly 3,000 dairy farms that produce over 15 billion pounds of milk annually, making New York the nation's fifth largest dairy state. Additionally, New York ranks 4th nationally in ice cream manufacturing with 51 payrolled business locations ranking the state 3rd in ice cream production in the nation.

Last year the Ferrero Group, a global leader in sweet, packaged foods with leading brands like Nutella, Tic Tac, Ferrero Rocher and others, acquired Wells Enterprises, Inc. Wells is the largest privately held ice cream manufacturer in the United States. Founded in 1913 by Fred H. Wells and run by the Wells family for generations, the company is now an independent operating company of the Ferrero Group.  Wells produces more than 200 million gallons of ice cream per year and distributes products in all 50 states. Wells employs over 4,000 employees across the country. The company is headquartered in Le Mars, Iowa, and operates multiple manufacturing plants, including the Dunkirk facility, located at 1 Ice Cream Drive. These facilities play an important role in the company’s expansion plans for its national manufacturing network of its Blue Bunny, Halo Top, Bomb Pop and Blue Ribbon Classics brands.


The ice cream plant will also continue to utilize Americold’s new cold-storage distribution facility located in the Town of Dunkirk, which is providing much-needed storage for the food supply chain in the area. Americold’s $41 million project was supported by up to $700,000 in performance-based taxed credits through the Excelsior Jobs Program in return for the creation of 60 full-time jobs.

Additional information about the Ferrero GroupWells Enterprises, and Wells Enterprises B-Roll video.


About Empire State Development

Empire State Development (ESD) is New York’s chief economic development agency. The mission of ESD is to promote a vigorous and growing economy, encourage the creation of new job and economic opportunities, increase revenues to the State and its municipalities, and achieve stable and diversified local economies. Through the use of loans, grants, tax credits and other forms of financial assistance, ESD strives to enhance private business investment and growth to spur job creation and support prosperous communities across New York State. ESD is also the primary administrative agency overseeing the New York State Regional Economic Development Councils and the marketing of “I LOVE NY,” the State’s iconic tourism brand. For more information on Regional Councils and Empire State Development, please visit www.regionalcouncils.ny.gov and www.esd.ny.gov.


2024 NEW YORK CITY CHARTER REVISION COMMISSION RELEASES FINAL REPORT

CRC






Report Presents Five Ballot Proposals Related to Cleaner Streets, Fiscal Responsibility, Public Safety, Capital Planning, Minority-and Women-Owned Businesses, and Modernization of City Policies Related to Film Permitting and Archival Review

 

Final Ballot Proposals Follow Full Review of City’s Charter, Expert and Elected Official Testimony, Public Feedback, Staff Research, and Public Hearings Attended by More Than 700 New Yorkers in All Five Boroughs

 

Commission Will Vote to Adopt Report’s Ballot Proposals at Final Public Meeting July 25


Following a review of the entire city charter, 12 hearings across all five boroughs, and testimony by members of the public, including experts, elected officials, good government groups, and academics, the 2024 New York City Charter Revision Commission (CRC) released its final report today. CRC members received testimony from more than 240 New Yorkers at public hearings. Additionally, the CRC received more than 2,300 written comments and public hearings were attended by more than 750 New Yorkers in-person and virtually. The CRC will vote to adopt the final report — which contains five ballot proposals that will benefit working-class New Yorkers — at its final meeting to be held on Thursday July 25, 2:00 PM at the Brooklyn Public Library, Central Library at 10 Grand Army Plaza. After the CRC’s vote, the ballot proposals will be placed on the November general election for New Yorkers to vote on.

 

The five ballot proposals address:

 

Clean Streets: The CRC proposes an amendment to expand and clarify the New York City Department of Sanitation’s (DSNY) authority to keep the city clean. The amendment would:

  • Enable DSNY, at the mayor’s direction, to clean any city-owned property.
  • Clarify that DSNY has the authority to require garbage to be containerized.
  • Extend DSNY enforcement authority over street vendors to other types of city property, instead of just streets and sidewalks.

Fiscal Responsibility: The CRC proposes an amendment to improve how the city assesses the fiscal impact of proposed local laws and address certain outdated and inefficient budget deadlines. The amendment would:

  • Require that an initial fiscal impact statement be prepared prior to a public hearing on a proposed local law.
  • Require an updated fiscal impact statement prior to a vote on a proposed local law by the full City Council.
  • Require that fiscal impact statements for proposed laws contain an estimate by both the City Council and the Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget.
  • Update several budget-related deadlines, including moving the preliminary budget deadline from January 16 to February 1 in years following a mayoral election and extending the deadline for submission of the executive budget from April 26 to May 1, in order to ensure the executive budget reflects crucial information about tax collections and revenues obtained at the April 1 tax deadline.

 Public Safety: The CRC proposes an amendment to promote public input and deliberation in the consideration of local laws affecting public safety. The amendment would:

  • Establish additional procedural requirements for the City Council’s consideration of proposed local laws affecting the public safety operations of three city agencies: the New York City Police Department (NYPD), the New York City Department of Correction (DOC), and the Fire Department of the City of New York (FDNY).
  • Require that prior to a vote by the City Council on a public safety proposal for those three agencies, the Council, or the relevant committee, would hold a public hearing; give notice of an intention to hold such a hearing to the public, the mayor, and the commissioners of affected agencies at least 45 days in advance of such a hearing; and allow the commissioner of an affected agency or their designee the opportunity to testify at a hearing on the proposed law.
  • Allow relevant agencies to file with the Council a “public safety impact statement” — a submission outlining an agency’s views on how a proposed measure will affect public safety — and require the Council to include that statement as part of the public legislative record.
  • Require that if, after a hearing, the Council intends to proceed to a vote by the full Council on a covered public safety proposal, the Council or the relevant committee would be required to give an additional notice to the public, the mayor, and the commissioners of affected agencies at least 50 days in advance of a vote. During the period between the notice and the ultimate vote, the mayor and affected agencies would be permitted to hold one or more additional public hearings on the proposal in order to solicit additional public input. These hearings could include, where appropriate, public hearings in all boroughs to facilitate input from impacted communities.

 Capital Planning: The CRC proposes an amendment to improve the city’s capital planning process by promoting transparency and ensuring the city collects critical information to inform capital planning. The amendment would: 

  • Promote transparency by ensuring the city publishes more information about the state of repair for facilities.
  • Ensure that the New York City Department of City Planning and the Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget consider city facility conditions and maintenance needs, together with other factors such as geographic distribution, impact on resiliency, and the criticality of an asset to an agency’s function or mission when developing the 10-Year Capital Strategy. 

Minority- and Women-Owned Business Enterprises (M/WBEs) and Modernization of City Operations: The CRC proposes an amendment to update several charter provisions to improve city government operations. The amendment would: 

  • Enshrine the chief business diversity officer in the charter and provide that this position will serve as the point of contact for M/WBEs, evaluate the efficacy of city policies to address disparities in procurement, and propose needed changes to city policy.
  • Empower the mayor to give the office that processes film permits — the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment — the power to issue those permits.
  • Combine two charter-created boards that share the same mission of reviewing municipal archives. 

A full list of the public hearings held by the CRC is available on the CRC's Public Meetings and Hearings webpage. All meetings were open to the public, live streamed, and 10 of the 12 hearings were held in the evening to accommodate as many New Yorkers as possible. Language translation services and American Sign Language interpreters were available, and each meeting was held in an accessible space. The public was alerted to CRC public meetings through legal notices, media outreach — including through ethnic and community media — and by utilizing messages through organizations with large distribution lists, including community boards and elected officials. Public notices for each meeting were published in the city record and made available on the CRC website. All notices were translated into Bengali, simplified and traditional Chinese, Korean, and Spanish.

All the CRC’s public documents — including its preliminary report, press releases, translations of commission materials, and other notices — as well as recordings of all the commission’s public hearings may be found online on the CRC's website. 

News, updates and more from NYC Council Member Rafael Salamanca, Jr.

 

150-UNITS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR SENIORS 

🏡 Senior housing isn’t just about providing shelter for the pillars of our community - it’s about empowering our elders to age in dignity, and to remain integral members of the communities they helped build.

👉 With its 150-units of affordable housing for seniors 62 years young and up, Garden Towers Apartments does just that for the future seniors who will call the building home.

I thank my colleagues in government for their financial support and commend Foxy Management for their continued commitment to ensuring #Bronxites have access to safe, affordable housing.



"PROTECTING NEW YORK CITY'S FOOD SUPPLY"

Did you know:
👉 If the Hunts Point Meat Market lost power for 3 consecutive days, they would lose close to $200 million in meat production.

During a productive walkthrough at the Market yesterday, I received updates on their expansion plans - including upgrades to their old refrigeration system, which is supported by the $12.7 million my office has allocated to them over the last 2 years.

"MENTORING OUR FUTURE LEADERS"

Let's extend a warm welcome to our Interns- Alesha & Robert- who will be joining 
#TeamSalamanca will assist with administrative and community services through the remainder of the summer.

UPCOMING EVENTS

IN THE NEWS

"I felt that the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA)’s policy didn't have any teeth into it. NYCHA is not reviewing these e batteries to make sure they're not black market e batteries. Right now, there's no police to have them register, so how do they know who has one and who doesn't? There's no way to monitor it - NYCHA said it's a ‘see something say something policy.’”
More ⬇️
https://abc7ny.com/post/new-york-city-housing-authority-has-enacted-new/15064129/

Visit our District Office at: 
1070 Southern Boulevard
Bronx, New York 10459
(718) 402-6130
salamanca@council.nyc.gov

New York Man Appears on Federal Drug Charge

 

The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Vermont announced that Jamonty Brister, 29, of Queens, New York, appeared in United States District Court in Burlington on a complaint charging him with a federal drug offense. U.S. Magistrate Judge Kevin J. Doyle ordered that Brister be detained without bail pending trial, which has not been scheduled at this time.

According to the criminal complaint filed on July 18, 2024, in June 2024, Burlington Police Department drug investigators and DEA Task Force officers made three controlled purchases of fentanyl from Brister utilizing a confidential source. Earlier this week, officers obtained a state court warrant to search the Burlington residence where Brister had been living. They executed the warrant on the morning of July 17 and arrested Brister, who was alone in a locked bedroom. During the search of Brister’s bedroom, officers recovered about 900 grams of cocaine base, about 130 grams of fentanyl, about $10,000 in cash, and a handgun. The complaint charges Brister with possessing the seized narcotics with intent to distribute.

The United States Attorney emphasizes that the charges in the complaint are accusations only and that the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until he is proven guilty.

If convicted, Brister faces up to 20 years of imprisonment and a fine of up to $1,000,000. The actual sentence will be determined by the U.S. District Court with guidance from the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines and the statutory sentencing factors. 

This case was investigated by the Burlington Police Department and the Drug Enforcement Administration. 

Brister is represented by Assistant Federal Public Defender Sara Puls. The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Gregory Waples.

This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results. For more information about Project Safe Neighborhoods, please visit Justice.gov/PSN.

PARENTS OF TEEN DRIVER SENTENCED ON CHILD ENDANGERMENT CHARGES IN GROUNDBREAKING CASE AFTER SON ALLEGEDLY KILLED 14-YEAR-OLD GIRL IN GRUESOME COLLISION

 

Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz announced that the parents of a teen driver – who was charged with manslaughter in the death of the 14-year-old passenger in the BMW he was driving – were sentenced today in a groundbreaking case on endangering the welfare of a child charges for facilitating the child’s access to the car when he was legally unable to drive the vehicle.

District Attorney Katz said: “The parents of a 16-year-old gave their son a BMW when he did not have legal authority to drive it anywhere in New York City. We allege that because of that teenager’s actions, 14-year-old Fortune Williams is now dead after she was thrown from the car when it crashed into a UPS truck at more than 100 miles an hour. With this conviction, we have shown that the culpability in a fatal crash can go beyond the driver. Parents who provide vehicles to their children and let them drive illegally can be held responsible in the case of tragedies such as this one. We will continue to seek justice for Fortune Williams and her grieving family.”

The teen driver’s father, Sean Smith, 40, of 227th Street in Springfield Gardens, pleaded guilty on June 11 before Supreme Court Justice Michael Yavinsky to endangering the welfare of a child. He was sentenced today to three years of probation. As a condition of the sentence, he must take a 26-week parenting class and attend the Victim Impact Panel Program.

The boy’s mother, Deo Ramnarine, 43, also of 227th Street, pleaded guilty to endangering the welfare of a child and disorderly conduct on June 11. Judge Yavinsky sentenced her to a 26-week parenting class and to attend the Victim Impact Panel Program. If she successfully completes both, she will be allowed to withdraw her plea to endangering the welfare of a child and only the disorderly conduct charge will stand.

The now 17-year-old, of 227th Street, was arraigned in December on charges of manslaughter in the second degree; three counts of assault in the second degree; assault in the third degree; reckless endangerment in the second degree; endangering the welfare of a child; reckless driving; driving in excess of the maximum speed limit; unsafe lane change on a roadway laned for traffic; making an unlawful turn; two counts of operating a motor vehicle with a tinted windows; operating or driving a motor vehicle without a license; and operating a motor vehicle in violation of a restricted permit or license.

The case against their son is ongoing and he faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted of the top count.

According to the investigation:

  • On May 17, 2023, at approximately 6:38 p.m., the then 16-year-old defendant was driving a red 2005 BMW 325i westbound on North Conduit Avenue near 160th Street at a speed calculated at 101 miles per hour. The posted speed limit was 30 miles per hour.
  • The teenager lost control of the vehicle when attempting to move from the left-center lane to the right-center lane and crashed into the back of a parked UPS truck. After hitting the truck, the BMW spun across the roadway and struck a tractor-trailer traveling westbound.
  • As a result of the initial collision, Williams was ejected from the front passenger seat of the BMW into the back of the UPS truck. She suffered severe head trauma and was pronounced dead at the scene.
  • A UPS employee was getting into his truck just as the BMW collided with it, throwing the worker to the ground. He was taken to a local hospital where he was treated for a large hematoma to his leg, a laceration to his face and a bruise to his chest.
  • At the hospital where he was being treated for minor injuries, the defendant explained to police that he had picked Williams up at her home and was taking her to his grandmother’s house. His father, who was with his son at the hospital, told police that while the BMW was registered in his name, he had bought the vehicle for his son and that the car was his son’s.
  • The son had a junior driver’s license, which prohibited him from driving under any circumstances in New York City.
  • Three weeks after the fatal crash, on June 7, Smith told the car’s insurer that his son had driven the BMW approximately twice with him in the vehicle and that his son was a good driver.
  • Prior to the fatal collision, in November 2022, witnesses from the defendant’s school saw him regularly driving the same BMW and a school administrator informed the parents that their child was driving to school.
  • The child was also ticketed in November 2022 for driving without a license and driving while using a portable electronic device. His name is being withheld because of his age.