Lodi News-Sentinel

Profiles of the victims of the New York City bike path attack.

- By Debora Rey and Michael Rubinkam

One of the dead was a mother of young sons from Belgium. Five had traveled from Argentina to New York with a tight-knit group of classmates to celebrate the 30th anniversar­y of their graduation.

The other victims were Americans: One a new college graduate working as a software engineer, the other a doting son who had recently lost nearly 100 pounds and was getting a bike ride in between meetings at his World Trade Center job.

Those killed in the New York bike path attack reflect a city that is a melting pot, a magnet for internatio­nal visitors, and a business and technology capital.

“They saw New York as a special place to be,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio, “and we now and forever will consider them New Yorkers.”

The victims were mowed down by a rental truck Tuesday afternoon near the World Trade Center. Police called it a terrorist attack, saying the driver was an Uzbek immigrant who “did it in the name of ISIS.”

The largest group of victims came from Rosario, Argentina, the country’s third-largest city and the hometown of internatio­nal soccer star Lionel Messi and guerrilla leader Che Guevara. They had made the trip courtesy of one of their well-heeled friends, who was also among those who perished.

“It hurts us to think that these are people who walked the same school halls as we did or that studied in our same classrooms,” said Agustin Riccardi, a senior at the victims’ alma mater.

President Mauricio Macri said in Buenos Aires that the attack “hit all Argentines hard.”

On Wednesday, friends and relatives began rememberin­g the victims — and recounting the circumstan­ces that led them to New York.

Argentina friends

Three decades had passed since their 1987 graduation from the Polytechni­c School of Rosario, Argentina. But the Argentine victims of Tuesday’s truck attack, most of them architects, had remained close friends, getting together several times a year.

The five dead were among a group of 10 friends marking their graduation with a tour of New York and Boston, where a survivor of the group lived.

They had gone on a bike ride through Central Park on Tuesday before turning south, to lower Manhattan.

One victim, Hernan Diego Mendoza, was an architect and father of three who designed the home of his close friend, Estanislao Beas.

The Argentine foreign ministry identified the other victims as Ariel Erlij, Diego Enrique Angelini, Alejandro Damian Pagnucco and Hernan Ferruchi.

Ann-Laure Decadt

Ann-Laure Decadt, 31, the mother of a 3-year-old and a 3-monthold son, had traveled with her relatives to New York from a rural town in Belgium.

Decadt belonged to a prominent family that owns a venerable animal feed business in Staden, a town of 11,000 some 60 miles west of Brussels.

The family said in a statement that “she was riding a bike and apparently was surprised by a vehicle that came from behind.” Her husband and children had not traveled with her. Other family members escaped injury.

Decadt grew up in the town and was active in its social scene, taking part in the youth council and village fairs, said Staden’s mayor, Francesco Vanderjeug­d.

“Ann-Laure meant so much to us in town,” he said. “It is an attack in New York, but also one on our community.”

Flags flew at half-staff in the village, and a condolence register was opened at the community center Wednesday — All Saints’ Day, when Belgium traditiona­lly remembers the dead.

Darren Drake

Darren Drake, a 32-year-old project manager for Moody’s Investors Service at the World Trade Center, had recently lost a lot of weight — 93 pounds — after undergoing lap band surgery. He was out for a bike ride between meetings when the truck hit and killed him.

“While other people would take cigarette or coffee breaks, he would go out and ride the bike for 15 to 20 minutes,” his father, Jimmy Drake, told NJ.com.

Drake used to serve on the school board in New Milford, in northern New Jersey, where he was a native and lived with his parents. He had a master’s degree in business administra­tion and was working toward a second master’s degree, at Stevens Institute of Technology. He was a voracious reader and enjoyed listening to audio books.

Jimmy Drake told NorthJerse­y.com he and his son were close. They went hunting and fishing together, and Jimmy drove Darren every day to the terminal in suburban Hoboken so he could catch a train to his job in the city.

He sobbed as he recounted seeing his son’s body at the morgue.

“Just picture that face. He really looked like he was having a nice dream,” he said.

He called the Uzbek immigrant suspected in the attack a “psycho” but said he’s “not angry at all.”

“I’m hurt,” he said. “I’m absolutely hurt.”

Nicholas Cleves

Nicholas Cleves, 23, died not far from his home in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village. He was a software engineer and web developer.

Online profiles show he went to Elisabeth Irwin High School in New York City and graduated last year from Skidmore College with a degree in computer science. He had been working as a software engineer for the Unified Digital Group.

Cleves described himself on his Facebook page as a “nerdy white boy.” The most recent photo posted there showed him posing with some friends next to a Darth Vader figure at a Star Wars exhibit.

“Our hearts go out to Nicholas’s mother, Monica Missio, who is a member of the Skidmore class of 1981, the other members of his family, and his closest friends,” Skidmore President Philip A. Glotzbach wrote on the school’s website.

Outlining his aspiration­s on LinkedIn, Cleves wrote that he was “searching for ways in which technology can be used to make positive impacts on our everyday lives.”

Alex Silverstei­n, who hired Cleves as a Unified Digital Group intern during his senior year in college, wrote a glowing recommenda­tion on LinkedIn.

“I immediatel­y recognized his intelligen­ce and desire to know more about everything,” Silverstei­n wrote. “He is great with customers — polite, considerat­e, and patient. This is extremely useful emotional intelligen­ce that you can’t put a price on.”

 ?? ANDREW SAVULICH/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS ?? Medics remove an injured woman from the bike lane after man in a Home Depot rental truck plowed down bike riders on a Lower Manhattan bike path on Tuesday.
ANDREW SAVULICH/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Medics remove an injured woman from the bike lane after man in a Home Depot rental truck plowed down bike riders on a Lower Manhattan bike path on Tuesday.

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