Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Carnage

Did the City Just Blame a Pedestrian for Her Death on Crosswalk-Free Flatlands Ave.?

There are multiple reasons why a pedestrian would cross Flatlands Avenue “mid-block”: there’s no crosswalk, there is a bus stop, there is a park, and there is a school. Photo: Google

A pedestrian was killed along a dangerous stretch of Flatlands Avenue in Brooklyn on Monday, but Department of Transportation officials suggested she was at fault for crossing "mid-block" — even though the long stretch of roadway where she died runs about three football fields in length between traffic lights.

According to the initial report, which is issued by DOT in consultation with police, Vorda Begum, 25, was crossing Flatlands Avenue "mid-block" east of Ralph Avenue at around 9:40 p.m. on Monday when she was struck by the 25-year-old driver of a Ford Focus, who was heading eastbound on Flatlands.

Begum, who lived in Queens, was taken to Brookdale Hospital with severe head and body trauma, and died soon after the crash. The driver, whose name was not released, remained on the scene and was not charged. A police spokesman would not comment when asked if the driver was speeding, distracted or inebriated when he struck Begum.

The stretch of Flatlands Avenue where Begum was killed has a park, a school, a bus stop and is near a shopping district — and is well known to the Department of Transportation as a danger zone. In just the first six months of this year, there have been 11 reported crashes on the single long block between Ralph Avenue and E. 76th Street, injuring a pedestrian and four motorists, according to city stats.

During the eight years of the de Blasio administration, there were 445 reported crashes on that single block — or an average of 55 per year — injuring two cyclists, 35 pedestrians and 115 motorists, killing one car driver.

Yet no safety improvements were made to the block, which has no traffic light or crosswalk between E. 76th Street and Ralph Avenue — not even at the entrance of the South Shore High School (below):

Good luck getting to school, kid.
Good luck getting to school, kid.
Good luck getting to school, kid.

Crashes are a terrible fact of life at South Shore High School. As Streetsblog recently reported, there have been 93 school-day crashes on the streets immediately surrounding the school since 2015, more evidence of the dangers faced by pedestrians in the area.

There have been 93 school-day crashes at South Shore High School since 2015, according to a deep Streetsblog investigation.
There have been 93 school-day crashes at South Shore High School since 2015, many of them on the block of Flatlands Avenue in question, according to a deep Streetsblog investigation.
There have been 93 school-day crashes at South Shore High School since 2015, according to a deep Streetsblog investigation.

The DOT did not immediately respond to a question about why the agency chose to highlight the pedestrian's alleged behavior before the crash, instead pointing out that its media releases are based on information "prepared by" the NYPD.

"NYPD handles all criminal investigations, while NYC DOT reviews the street design at the locations of these crashes," said the statement from the agency. The crash information, however, is sent to the media from a DOT email address, yet included no information about the dangerous street design of Flatlands Avenue.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Sunday Read: Middle Village Has a Love-Hate Relationship with the IBX

The idea of making it easier to reach Middle Village clearly put some Middle Villagers on edge.

November 23, 2025

Speaker Adams and DOT Are Eviscerating Daylighting Bill

Some are looking to the next mayor and Council to pass the life-saving measure.

November 21, 2025

Memo to Mamdani: Fifth Ave. Belongs to the People — Not the Ultra-Wealthy and Gridlock

Mayor-elect Mamdani should revive DOT's plan to transform Fifth Avenue — which Bill de Blasio and Eric Adams shelved at the behest of powerful business interests.

November 21, 2025

‘Dirty and Embarrassing’: Jim McGreevey Fights Street Safety in Jersey City Mayoral Run

All eyes are on the Garden State's second city, where a former governor plots a comeback with a divisive, anti-safety campaign.

November 21, 2025

Cutting Federal Transit Funding Won’t Close Budget Gaps — But Will Make Transportation Less Affordable

The Trump administration's proposal to eliminate the mass transit account of the Highway Trust Fund would be short-sighted, ineffective, and ruinous, a new analysis finds.

November 21, 2025

Friday Video: A New Urbanist Heard From

Joel Katuala is "pissed off" about the criminal crackdown on cyclists.

November 21, 2025
See all posts