New York Daily News

Man, 28, shot to death in B’klyn

- BY CATHERINA GIOINO and LARRY McSHANE Jaonna Green (also inset) is treated at the scene of a two-car crash (top) last June that left her with major injuries.

A BRONX WOMAN nearly killed in a head-on car wreck last year blames the horrifying collision in a 70 mph police chase over another vehicle’s minor traffic violation.

Jaonna Green, 30, still wears a colostomy bag and faces an arduous recovery from the June 1, 2017, two-car crash that altered the course of her life forever.

“I can’t even walk two blocks without stopping,” the single mother of two told the Daily News. “I have hardware in my ankles . . . screws and metal plates.

“I had multiple laceration­s to my lungs and spleen and liver. And two broken ribs.”

Green’s attorney, in a complaint filed last week in the Bronx, charged the collision on a one-way street ensued after an NYPD officer recklessly hit the gas while pursuing a MercedesBe­nz — for an illegal lane change.

“There’s a decision that has to be made here,” said lawyer Michael Goldberg. “The police have to pursue bad guys — that’s their job. But this was not a guy who just robbed something or a terrorist fleeing.

“This is a guy who at worst made an illegal lane change or more likely did nothing.”

The Bronx Supreme Court paperwork named the NYPD, the city, Officer Jonathan Vasquez and Mercedes driver Danny Terry as defendants.

Court papers charge Vasquez pursued the fleeing luxury car “without lights and/or sirens, and therefore without any warning to the public.”

While Goldberg says department­al charges were brought against Vasquez, the NYPD could not confirm his disciplina­ry status — although he remains on the job.

Kimberly Joyce, spokeswoma­n for NYC Law, did not respond to an email for comment.

Green was riding with her brother to his early morning shift at UPS around 2:30 a.m. when things changed in an instant as they drove across a Boston Road bridge.

Even now, she’s unsure what happened.

“Just the car coming really fast,” she recalled. “So fast, it wasn’t really recognizab­le what’s coming at us.”

Green remained hospitaliz­ed for three months as she struggled to recover. No one else was injured as severely as Green, who rode in the front passenger seat.

When subpoenaed later to testify at an NYPD hearing against Vasquez, the victim was accompanie­d by Goldberg to provide her account of the crash.

But the lawyer said other testimony indicated there was no illegal lane change, and the pursuit started after the 2011 Mercedes and the police car were both turning into the same lane.

“So as it turns out, the police possibly caused the erratic driving behavior that they used as an excuse to pull him over,” said Goldberg — noting the driver was a young, black male.

The attorney said the costs of his client’s medical bills are already in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. She nearly died several times during her hospitaliz­ation.

Green said the emotional toll is even worse for her sons, ages 16 and 10.

“They’re traumatize­d,” she said of the boys. “They don’t know if their mother is going to make it. The younger one doesn’t fully understand, but the older one . . . He just looks at me like ‘I don’t know when my mother’s going to pass away.’” A MAN was shot and killed in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, on Saturday evening, police said.

The 28-year-old man was found with a gunshot wound to his head on Madison St. near Throop Ave. at 7:48 p.m., cops said.

The man, whose name was not released, died at the scene.

There are no arrests and no known motive. FFEJ YLIAD/RENHCAB SWEN

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With Thomas Tracy Noah Goldberg

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