Los Angeles Times

Dream vacation ends tragically

- By Andres D’Alessandro

Five of the slain victims were part of a group of 10 pals from Argentina holding a reunion in New York.

AIRES — It was a long-anticipate­d dream vacation for the 10 friends who traveled to New York to celebrate the 30th anniversar­y of their high school graduation, a rejuring union of tightknit pals from Argentina.

But the joyous gathering — capped off with a bike ride along a riverfront pathway near the World Trade Center memorial — turned into a nightmare when a suspected terrorist drove onto the crowded bike path, killing eight people and inBUENOS a dozen as he rammed into bikers, pedestrian­s and finally a school bus.

Five of the high school friends were among the dead.

Ariel Erlij, a 48-year-old father of three who organized and helped finance the trip for his old classmates, was the owner of a steel company. Hernan Ferruchi, 47; Diego Angelini, 47; Hernan Mendoza, 47; and Alejandro Pagnucco, 47, were all architects. All of them still lived near Rosario Polytechni­c Institute, where they learned their career skills and became lifelong friends.

“All he could talk about were the plans they had, the museums they were going to visit, all the details of the visit he was going to make with his dear classmates,” Mendoza’s brother, Mario, told La Capital, a newspaper in the city of Rosario.

“What should have been a party ended up in madness.”

A videotape of the friends obtained by La Capital captures a happy group riding along the bike path moments before the attack, laughing, waving, flashing the peace sign and mugging for the camera. A breeze off the river ruffles their hair.

“Champions,” one of the riders calls to the person shooting the video. He offers a thumbs-up.

Early Wednesday at the institute, before classes began, students and teachers gathered in a courtyard for a moment of silence. Alicia Oliva, the school’s vice director, slowly read the names of the victims, one by one.

“We embrace all our loved ones in this difficult moment that no one ever should have to live through,” the school said in a statement .

Rosario Mayor Monica Fein declared three days of mourning in the city to honor the victims.

“It seems impossible these Rosarian neighbors celebratin­g their 30th anniversar­y of graduation suffered this terrible crime by an unbalanced person in an act of terror of this magnitude,” the mayor said, adding that she was gripped by “profound pain.”

Argentine President Mauricio Macri said in a statement Wednesday that he felt “profound sadness” at the men’s deaths.

“This,” he said later in the day, “has really shocked many Argentines.”

In New York City on Wednesday, passersby paused at the cordoned-off bike path to stare at the crumpled rental truck used in the attack.

“I think it’s so sad that New York keeps getting targeted,” said Cassandra Davison, an Australian tourist.

The trip to America for the former classmates was partly to reunite with another student from Rosario, Martin Marro, who lives in Boston. Marro had met his friends in New York on Tuesday and joined them on the bike ride. He was among those injured and remained hospitaliz­ed Wednesday.

Mateo Estreme, the Argentine consul in New York, said he was handling arrangemen­ts to transport the bodies of the five men to Buenos Aires, about 175 miles southeast of Rosario.

Cecilia Piedrabuen­a, the wife of Ariel Benvenuto, another classmate, told the news media in Rosario that her husband escaped serious harm because he was riding at the rear of the group and was behind where the driver — identified by police as Sayfullo Saipov, a 29-year-old Uzbek immigrant — apparently cut into the bike lane and accelerate­d into riders.

“They had been looking forward to this trip for a long time,” Piedrabuen­a said. “I can’t believe it’s ended this way.”

D’Alessandro is a special correspond­ent. Special correspond­ents Chris Kraul and Matt Hansen in Bogota, Colombia, and New York, respective­ly, contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Courtesy of Cecilia Piedrabuen­a ?? HERNAN FERRUCHI, from left, Alejandro Pagnucco, Ariel Erlij, Ivan Brajckovic, Juan Pablo Trevisan, Hernan Mendoza, Diego Angelini and Ariel Benvenuto.
Courtesy of Cecilia Piedrabuen­a HERNAN FERRUCHI, from left, Alejandro Pagnucco, Ariel Erlij, Ivan Brajckovic, Juan Pablo Trevisan, Hernan Mendoza, Diego Angelini and Ariel Benvenuto.

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