National Post

‘It looked like it was trying to hit as many people as possible’

DRIVER CAREENS INTO CROWD IN TIMES SQUARE

- Colleen Long

• A man who appeared to be intoxicate­d steered his car onto a sidewalk running through the heart of Times Square on Thursday and mowed down pedestrian­s for three blocks, killing a teenager and injuring 22 others, before he was tackled by bystanders.

Pandemoniu­m erupted when the vehicle barrelled through the prime tourist location and slammed into a security barrier, coming to rest with two of its wheels in the air. The car leaned on a lamppost and steel barriers intended to block vehicles from getting onto the sidewalk.

“He didn’t stop,” said Asa Lowe, of Brooklyn, who was standing outside a store when he heard screaming. “He just kept going.”

“It was going at a fast rate of speed and to me it looked like it was trying to hit as many people as possible,” Annie Donahey, 24, told the New York Times. “People were trying to jump out of the way.”

“People were being hit and rolling off the car,” Josh Duboff told Reuters.

The driver was tackled by pedestrian­s and taken into custody. He was being tested for drugs and alcohol and charges against him were pending.

T he crash killed an 18- year- old woman, and the injured included her 13-yearold sister, police said.

The driver, a 26- year- old navy veteran named Richard Rojas, was taken into custody and was undergoing tests for alcohol and drugs, Police Commission­er James O’Neill said. Rojas had been arrested at least twice previously for driving while intoxicate­d, once in 2008 and once in 2015, police said. He pleaded guilty to an infraction in 2015 and was ordered to complete a drunken driving program and lost his licence for 90 days.

He was arrested last week on a charge of menacing. Police said he pointed a kitchen knife at a notary who’d come over to do paperwork, and he accused the notary of stealing his identity. The case is pending.

In previous arrests, he told authoritie­s he believed he was being harassed and followed, according to a law enforcemen­t official who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly.

Rojas enlisted in the U. S. Navy in 2011 and was an electricia­n’s mate fireman apprentice, according to the navy. He was most recently based at the Naval Air Station in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., and was discharged in 2014.

The crash happened at midday on a hot, clear day that brought large crowds of people into the streets to enjoy the good weather.

Police said Rojas made a quick U- turn on to 42nd Street and drove up the sidewalk for three blocks, passing tourist draws like the Hard Rock Cafe and the Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. restaurant and mowing people down before slamming into a pole.

Bruno Carvalho, a student at SUNY Albany, said the car approached quickly and passed him on the sidewalk.

“People just got stunned,” he s aid. “I don’ t t hink there was actually time for screaming.”

Victims had no time to react and scramble for safety in crowded Times Square, said Alpha Balde, a sightseein­g- ticket seller. “This place?” Balde said. “Anything happens here, there’s no time for people to get out.”

After the crash, the driver climbed out of the vehicle and began to run, witnesses and police said. Ken Bradix, a door host supervisor at Planet Hollywood, struck him to get him to stop, Balde said. He and Bradix jumped on top of Rojas, lifted his shirt to make sure he had no weapons and held him until police arrived moments later, Balde said.

Planet Hollywood said Bradix “selflessly and heroically took action, helping to stop the fleeing suspect.”

Rojas was combative with officers who handcuffed him, authoritie­s said.

Two law enforcemen­t officials said Rojas told officers he was hearing voices and expected to die.

Police do not suspect a link to terrorism, but the vehicle was checked by the bomb squad and some landmarks were getting beefedup security.

Harrison Ramos, a friend of Rojas, said he hadn’t been the same since he returned from active duty in the navy. He said Rojas was posting “crazy stuff ” online that has since been taken down.

 ?? SETH WENIG / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A smashed car rests after an allegedly intoxicate­d man plowed through pedestrian­s in New York City, killing one person and injuring 22.
SETH WENIG / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A smashed car rests after an allegedly intoxicate­d man plowed through pedestrian­s in New York City, killing one person and injuring 22.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada