Daniel Hyden of Monmouth Junction, N.J. is charged with aggravated vehicular homicide, aggravated vehicular assault, manslaughter, assault and operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated charges. Hyden was driving with a suspended license, prosecutors said.
According to prosecutors, Hyden drove a Ford F-150 pickup truck into the crowd at Corlears Hook Park just before 9 p.m. local time. He allegedly ran through a stop sign at the intersection of Water and Cherry Streets, drove up onto the sidewalk, slammed through the chain link fence, and into the crowd.
Eleven people were killed or injured, prosecutors said. The three people killed have been identified as Lucille Pinkney, 59, and her son Herman Pinkney, 38, and Ana Morel, 43. Another person was critically injured, and seven others hospitalized. The youngest victim was 11, according to prosecutors.
Responding police officers say they found Hyden on the ground next to the driver's-side door, wearing pants but no shirt or shoes. He had bloodshot eyes, was stumbling and there was "a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage on his breath."
"It's a very sad case. But Hyden, like anybody else that's accused of a crime, is entitled to zealous representation, and that's exactly what he's going to get," Timothy Pruitt of the Legal Aid Society said.
"Justice needs to be done"
"We should not have these type of people out in the streets endangering people and killing people," Morel's cousin Luz Leon said.
Leon said her cousin was fun and loved to party, but also someone to turn to for advice. Morel is survived by her heartbroken mother, and 25-year-old son, who Leon says is still struggling to process her death.
"Nothing would bring my cousin or the people who passed that day back. But justice needs to be done. And that would be looking like him staying in jail for the rest of his life.
Hyden is due back in in court July 10.
A vigil for the victims is planned for the crash site Sunday.
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