New York Daily News

Kid hit by ice cream truck

11-year-old riding new bike critically hurt in Brooklyn

- BY LIAM QUIGLEY AND THOMAS TRACY

An 11-year-old Brooklyn boy was critically injured after he was struck and dragged by an unlicensed Mister Softee ice cream truck driver while riding his new bike, police and witnesses said.

Bleeding from his head and struggling to breathe through his collapsed lungs, Tyson Anderson turned to a gathering crowd at the crash site at Sutter Ave. and Hendrix St. in East New York on Friday evening and wondered if he was going to see another day.

“He said ‘Am I gonna die? Am I gonna die?’ ” witness Brian Franklin, 65, told the Daily News Saturday. Tyson managed to give Franklin his address, but the panicked child couldn’t remember his phone number.

“Everybody came out,” Franklin recalled. “They went banging on doors, and the mother came up, by the time she came up he was already in the ambulance.”

Tyson was in the crosswalk at 6:45 p.m. when the ice cream truck clipped him and knocked him off his bike, cops were told.

The child and his bike fell underneath the truck and were dragged for a short distance before a group of young girls ran up to the vehicle an demanded the driver stop, horrified witnesses told police.

Tyson suffered serious injuries to his head and body and was rushed to Brookdale University Medical Center, where he underwent surgery Saturday, his father Anthony Anderson said outside the family’s apartment, which is down the block from the crash scene.

“His lungs collapsed, he broke a couple of bones by his lung,” Anderson, 29 said. “(The doctors) just fixed it this morning.”

Tyson had just graduated elementary school and the bike he was riding was a gift for getting good grades, his father said.

“He just brought some trophies home,” said the proud dad, exhausted after a night in the hospital. “[He got] like first place for everything. He’s one of eight but he’s the smartest kid you could know.”

The ice cream truck driver, who was identified as Bronx resident Juan Remigio, 58, was taken into custody for driving with a suspended license, cops said.

The ice cream truck was heading south on Hendrix St. and came to a stop at Sutter Ave. He proceeded through the intersecti­on just as Tyson pedaled into it, police said.

Anderson was outside and recalled seeing a commotion down the block.

“I saw the guy keep going and the girls were chasing the truck,” he said. “I put one and two together, I thought he was running. But the girls made him stop, I want to thank them for that.”

Remigio didn’t say anything to police when he was taken into custody. Neighbors suspect that he didn’t realize he had hit the child until people tried to stop him.

“People started to shout, but he didn’t seem to know what they were shouting about,” said one neighbor, who wished not to be named.

Cops charged him with aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, failure to yield to a pedestrian and failure to use due care.

A person who answered the phone at the Brooklyn office of Mister Softee hung up twice when asked about the accident.

“[Cars] usually fly through here, but it was an ice cream truck. It usually crawls through here,” Franklin said. “Everybody else, it’s like the Daytona Speedway. They need a speed bump, I hate speed bumps, but we need them.”

 ?? ?? Tyson Anderson, 11, suffered collapsed lungs and broken bones Saturday after being hit by an ice cream truck in Brooklyn. He was riding new bike (above), a gift from his family for getting good grades.
Tyson Anderson, 11, suffered collapsed lungs and broken bones Saturday after being hit by an ice cream truck in Brooklyn. He was riding new bike (above), a gift from his family for getting good grades.

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