SUV Plummets onto LIRR Tracks in Brooklyn, Killing One

The driver of an SUV on Friday crashed into the concrete barrier and fell down onto the LIRR train tracks, killing one man and critically injuring a woman inside. Photo: Julianne Cuba
The driver of an SUV on Friday crashed into the concrete barrier and fell down onto the LIRR train tracks, killing one man and critically injuring a woman inside. Photo: Julianne Cuba
It's our December donation drive. Click this link to donate.
It’s our December donation drive. Click this link to donate.

A 70-year-old man died and his passenger critically injured when the driver with a record of recklessness behind the wheel drove an Audi SUV from Vanderbilt Avenue onto the Long Island Rail Road tracks on Atlantic Avenue on Friday.

It’s unclear what happened, but the force of the crash suggests incredible speed. One witness told Streetsblog that the driver, who was later identified by police as Francois Cadely of Brooklyn, turned north from Pacific Street towards Atlantic Avenue at about 12:45 p.m. when he veered into a concrete Jersey barrier and chain-link fence on the west side of Vanderbilt. But neither stopped the luxury SUV from nose diving onto the tracks.

“I thought the concrete barrier was gonna stop it but it didn’t and it just went over,” said the witness, who asked for anonymity. She said the driver looked like he could have been going 30-to-40 miles per hour. “The two ladies that were walking, the car just missed. She had a delayed reaction and screamed just realizing she almost got hit, and I was like, ‘What did I just see?’”

A chunk of the concrete barrier is missing, right where the SUV crashed into and where two women were walking by. Photo: Julianne Cuba
A chunk of the concrete barrier is missing, right where the SUV crashed into and where two women were walking by. Photo: Julianne Cuba

Another witness who lives next door told Streetsblog that he heard the car hit the jersey barrier before falling nearly 50 feet down.

“I saw the car falling. It was crazy. We saw the people, they were both on their sides, still in the car,” said Ryan, who asked his last name not be used.

Police had limited information, but are already claiming that the crash could have been the result of a “medical episode” or even a “freak accident,” according to an NYPD spokesperson and one officer from the 78th Precinct who was on the scene, but was clearly not properly trained in the word “accident” (of which there are none). But information later sent out by police does not mention a medical episode, or any cause of the fatal crash.

The NYPD’s narrative also conflicts with the witnesses. Cops said the driver came out of a McDonald’s drive-thru and raced across Vanderbilt Avenue, “performing a u-turn at the location,” when he plowed into the fence and concrete barrier, sending a large chunk of it crashing down onto the tracks along with the SUV and victims. The 60-year-old woman who was in the front passenger seat remains in critical condition.

Officers could not say whether Cadely was speeding or distracted at the time of the collision, but camera violations associated with his license plate reveal a history of reckless driving. The Audi’s license plate has racked up 13 speeding tickets since 2019, including four in the last year alone, according to city records.

The SUV on the LIRR train tracks. Photo: Julianne Cuba
The SUV on the LIRR train tracks. Photo: Julianne Cuba

And cops have been quick to call previous fatal crashes a medical episode without any evidence. One notorious instance was the case of 37-year-old Xing Long Lin, who was killed by driver Maro Andrianou in April 2021. Cops claimed just minutes after the fatal crash that Andrianou, who did not face any criminal charges from the Queens District Attorney, had suffered a medical episode. But Andrianou’s ex-husband denied that theory, and the narrative about what caused her Mercedes-Benz to fly down the road and into Lin soon shifted.

Police said the investigation is ongoing.

This story has been updated with more information from police.

ALSO ON STREETSBLOG

Caption Contest: Time to Expand Car-Free Broadway [Updated]

|
Just another day at 53rd and Seventh. Photo: Gawker. Hey, here’s some of that pulse-pounding New York City energy that a few people wish we still had in the middle of Times Square. Instead of propelling a vehicle through midtown streets, the energy embedded in this taxi’s tankful of gasoline has been converted into giant […]

Caption Contest: Chuck Schumer Rides the Prospect Park West Bike Lane

|
Looks like protected bike infrastructure is growing on Chuck Schumer. High-powered backchannel NIMBY assault notwithstanding, New York’s senior senator apparently does enjoy riding the bike lane in his front yard, as you can see in this Sunday morning photo courtesy of fellow PPW resident Paul Steely White. So, when will the rest of Streetsblog’s 2011 April Fools […]

Caption Contest: Tappan Zee Outreach Gone Fishin’

|
Until last fall, the state’s planning for a new Tappan Zee Bridge was a model of public outreach. It included over 280 public meetings and one outreach center open full-time on each side of the bridge. Under Governor Andrew Cuomo, however, the project has been “fast-tracked.” Transit was axed from the bridge and the project […]