Manhattan, NY - A New York City man who intervened in the
beating of a driver pulled from his car and set upon by a group of bikers said
Sunday he “felt intense danger” as he protected the assaulted man.
Sergio Consuegra told reporters that he wishes he could have
done more. He had been on his way to church on Sept. 29 when he saw an SUV stop
on 178th Street in Manhattan and a group of motorcyclists approach.
“I made a simple step that day, a simple gesture. ... I must
say today, to send a message to all that whenever they see a family in crisis,
no matter the circumstances, when they cry for help, be there for them,” he
said, at the scene of where the incident took place and accompanied by elected
officials.
Police have said the bikers stopped the SUV on a highway,
attacked the vehicle and then pulled the driver from his car on after he plowed
over a Massachusetts motorcyclist while trying to escape the initial
confrontation.
The driver, Alexian Lien, needed stiches after being beaten by
the bikers.
The motorcyclist who was crushed by the SUV, Edwin Mieses Jr., of
Lawrence, Mass., suffered a broken spine and two broken legs and may never walk
again, according to his family.
Consuegra said the riders started hitting the car, and that
one of them tried to grab Lien’s wife, who was in the car along with their
child.
“She was kind of making some sounds,” he said. “I saw a baby
inside; she had the baby in her arms, I guess she was protecting the baby from
all the glass that was flying inside and outside.”
He said bystanders started screaming for the woman and baby
to be left alone, and the biker let go.
Lien was on the ground when Consuegra stepped in between him
and the bikers.
“There was more coming, and they feel like they wanted to
keep hurting the man - and I felt intense danger at that moment, at that time,
and I say to myself, `Let me not show these people that I’m here to engage in
any kind of confrontation but that I’m here to protect the man and the family,
so I’m going to keep it cool.’ That’s what I was thinking,” Consuegra said.
One motorcycle rider, Robert Sims, 35, of Brooklyn, has been
arraigned on charges including gang assault.
Another man, Reginald Chance, 37, of Brooklyn, was in
custody and expected to be arraigned on Sunday.
He was brought briefly into
court, where Manhattan state Supreme Court Justice Charles Solomon explained
that court personnel had been trying to reach Chance’s lawyer but hadn’t heard
from him.
Chance, in a dark pants and a brown hooded sweatshirt, said
he’d spoken to the lawyer earlier in the day.
The judge said he hoped to be able to conduct the
arraignment later Sunday afternoon.
Two other people have faced formal charges in connection
with the attack, though the case against one of those motorcyclists was
subsequently dismissed when prosecutors said they needed more time to investigate.
New York News
New York News
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