Tragic new accounts of July 4 horror that killed four in NYC: ‘I just watched my daughter die’

A stricken mom testified Monday about the horrifying moment she found her daughter’s battered body under an alleged drunken driver’s truck in a tragic July 4 crash in Manhattan. She watched helplessly as life ebbed from her child.

“I saw her, Emily,” Liliana Ruiz said, referring to her daughter Emily Ruiz, 31, who was one of four people killed by accused boozed-up motorist Daniel Christopher Hyden.

“Her eyes were wide open, like saucers,” the mother recounted. “I’m just looking at her. I’m tapping her face, telling her, ‘Everything’s gonna be OK. Emily, don’t close your eyes.’”

Ruiz continued, “I see her lips turning purple, her eyes are going shut, and she’s trying not to close them. But at one point, they completely closed.”

“And I’m thinking, ‘I just watched my daughter die.’”

Liliana herself survived the July 4, 2024 vehicular onslaught only because she had gone to the bathroom moments before the crash.

Her daughter’s 7-year-old son, Kai-El, would later heartbreakingly bring his toy first-aid kit to the hospital where his mother lay brain-dead, trying “to help the doctors” treating her, prosecutors said.

Liliana described the painful decision she eventually made to take her daughter off life support.

“My daughter was brain-dead, so I had to make the choice,” she testified.

Assistant District Attorney Matthew Bogdanos asked, “And what choice did you make?”

The shattered mom replied, “To let her go.”

Her heart-wrenching account came on the first day of the trial in the wreck that also killed Herman Pinkney, 38; his aunt, 59-year-old Lucille Pinkney; and Ana Morel, 43. Seven others were injured when Hyden allegedly slammed his Ford F-150 into Corlears Hook Park, where the neighborhood was celebrating Independence Day on the night of July 4.

Prosecutors said Hyden, 44, kept his foot on the gas after striking 11 people, with the injured bodies under the SUV being the only thing stopping him from continuing to drive.

“My adrenaline started to rush,” survivor Hector Moreno, a friend of the Pinkneys, said at the non-jury trial. “I stood on the bleachers, I saw the driver. He looked disoriented.

“He still had his foot on the gas,” Moreno said. “I just started hitting him as hard as I could, and I didn’t stop until I couldn’t even hit him anymore. The last thing I heard was, ‘Help get Herman out from underneath the car!’”

Hyden, who had been denied entry to a local watering hole earlier for being too drunk, was roughed up by the crowd and arrested. Police later reported his blood-alcohol level at .17, more than twice the legal limit.

Ana Morel’s mother, Zolia Hernandez, was in upstate New York at the time and only learned of her daughter’s violent death hours later, she testified before Supreme Court Judge April Newbauer.

Lucille Pinkney’s sister, Liliana Lewis, had the grim task of identifying both her sibling’s and her nephew’s bodies at the hospital.

“I see my nephew all bloodied up,” Lewis testified. “I saw him myself. He was dead. Then I went to the next room to see my sister. She was dead.”

Hyden’s lawyer, Theodore Herlich, stated during opening statements that his client had suffered a foot injury during a fight at a club earlier that night, suggesting this may have contributed to the deadly crash.

“He was limping,” Herlich told the judge. “He had injured his right foot that he uses to drive a car. I will note that at one half second before the crash, the driver simultaneously had one foot on the accelerator at 100% and another foot on the brake, causing the vehicle to decelerate from 52 mph to 48.1 mph.”
https://nypost.com/2025/10/20/us-news/tragic-new-accounts-of-july-4-horror-that-killed-four-in-nyc/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *