New York Daily News

MUGGED IN CENTRAL PARK FOR $1.60

Search for quiet in park ends in beating by thug

- BY TINA MOORE and JOSEPH STEPANSKY With Kerry Burke

A FREELANCE writer who went to Central Park to seek solitude from the noisy city had her peaceful retreat shattered by a brute who violently mugged her for a measly $1.60.

The 26-year-old scribe from Brooklyn sought out a quiet spot in the iconic park to research a piece on finding secluded spots in the Big Apple when she was attacked and robbed, the victim told the Daily News Thursday.

The woman, who asked that her name not be used, was on a break from her job at a PR firm around 11 a.m. Wednesday and decided to swing by the park, she told The News.

“I was writing a story on silence, what the noise of the city does to us, and where to find silence,” said the writer, who was recovering at home Thursday.

While contemplat­ing the bustle of life in the boroughs on a bench near W. 101st St., overlookin­g The Pool, the woman found the repose she hoped to write about, and walked along a secluded path to the restrooms on the Great Hill.

“There were nannies reading books and people jogging right next to it,” she said. “I thought, this is so peaceful.”

But walking back from the restroom on the same path, that calm was broken by a “muscular” 6-foot man who pounced on her and beat her, police said. The hulking attacker, a man between 35 and 40, continued punching her in the face even after she fell to the ground, cops said.

“I looked at him when he was walking . . . I thought this could be a very dangerous situation,” said the woman.

“When he started screaming ‘Give me your purse’ and punching me in the face the first thing I think I thought was, ‘So this is what it’s like to be beat up.’ ”

The mugger made off with just $1.60 in cash and two credit cards, which the woman canceled. He also got her Social Security card and her driver permit, but overlooked her laptop and engagement ring, she said.

The woman, who is working on a journalism certificat­e from New York University, suffered a black eye, bruising, and possibly a broken wrist, she said.

The attacker was still at large Thursday, police said.

Robberies inside the park, which is policed by its own NYPD precinct, have nearly doubled so far this year compared with 2014, jumping from 8 to 15 as of July 12, according to NYPD data.

Residents who live near the park said the attack has them rethinking their daily walks.

“I’m not going to walk in the park, not anymore, I’m going to walk in the sidewalk,” said Sandrine Poaty, a constructi­on estimator from Harlem.

But the recovering writer said she won’t let the attack keep her down — and it wouldn’t keep her from writing her story.

“It was a very ironic situation,” she said. “Thank God he didn’t have a knife.”

 ??  ?? A Brooklyn woman, 26, was sitting on this bench in Central Park (above) before she went for a walk on this path and was mugged by a brute.
A Brooklyn woman, 26, was sitting on this bench in Central Park (above) before she went for a walk on this path and was mugged by a brute.

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