Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

At Times Square rampage trial, victims tell of horrors

- Tom Hays

NEW YORK – For some survivors, the sounds are a part of what still haunts them. People screaming. Car tires screeching. An engine revving.

It was “like somebody just floored it. … It was so loud,” Jyll Elsman told a jury on a recent day in a Manhattan courtroom. “That is the last thing that I remember before everything went black.”

When Elsman came to her senses, she desperatel­y searched for her teen daughters only to find a mother’s nightmare. One of her children was dead and another severely injured – carnage left by a driver who plowed through pedestrian­s on what had begun, for a Michigan family, as a mundane tourist outing in Times Square in 2017.

Elsman’s harrowing story is central to the ongoing trial of Richard Rojas, the man behind the wheel of a Honda Accord that killed Elsman’s daughter and injured more than 20 other people in an alleged attack with a motive that remains elusive. Rojas, 31, has pleaded not guilty to murder, assault and other charges.

Prosecutor­s are largely relying on the testimony of victims like Elsman to make a case against Rojas that could put him behind bars for decades. His lawyers say he had a mental breakdown that day and had no capacity to understand what he was doing.

At the time, he was someone “suffering from schizophre­nia whose mind had deteriorat­ed so much that he lost control,” said defense attorney Enrico DeMarco in opening statements about a client who’s appeared impassive during the proceeding­s. DeMarco added: “The evidence is going to show he met the criteria for legal insanity.”

Prosecutor Alfred Peterson conceded Rojas had some mental challenges. But Peterson also argued the defendant was a military veteran who had led a mostly normal life and didn’t meet the insanity standard.

Experts are slated to address the mental health question later in the trial. For now, that has left jurors to analyze the prosecutio­n’s case, which started with them seeing a selfie, flashed on a video screen, of Elsman, her daughters Ava and Alyssa, and a family friend seated on the red bleachers in the middle of Times Square moments before tragedy struck.

The group was walking and “just looking around, kind of eyeballing someplace to eat,” when a car mounted the sidewalk, Elsman said. She testified she felt herself getting knocked down by the car, briefly going blank and then pulling herself up to look for her daughters.

The mother found Ava, then 13, on the ground but still alert. She then rushed around to look for Alyssa, who was 18. What she found was devastatin­g.

“I looked at her eyes and I just knew she was dead. They were fixed. They weren’t looking around,” she said. “All I could do was scream.”

Ava was mowed down in a similar way. She recited her injuries for the jurors: broken ribs, collapsed lung, a compound leg fracture and other harm that kept her off her feet for months.

She said a deeper injury occurred in the hospital, when she asked her mother about what happened to her older sister. She was answered with silence.

Her mother’s “face dropped,” she said. “And with no words, I knew exactly what had happened.”

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP FILE ?? The car driven by Richard Rojas sits in Times Square after being driven into a crowd of pedestrian­s.
SETH WENIG/AP FILE The car driven by Richard Rojas sits in Times Square after being driven into a crowd of pedestrian­s.

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