GRAVESEND — MOURNERS AND SAFE-STREET advocates gathered March 29 at Ocean Parkway and Quentin Road to mark the first anniversary of the crash that killed 34-year-old Natasha Saada and her daughters, Diana, 8, and Deborah, 5, CBS News New York reports.
Flowers were laid at the intersection where influencer Miriam Yarimi, then 32, ran a red light at more than twice the posted speed limit on a suspended license and struck the family in a crosswalk. Yarimi, who had amassed more than 90 traffic violations and $10,000 in unpaid fines, pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced in November 2025 to three to nine years in prison. Saada’s 4-year-old son, Philip, survived but required a kidney removal and treatment for skull fractures.
Advocates renewed calls for Albany to pass legislation requiring speed-governing devices in vehicles registered to “superspeeders” or owners who accumulate repeated camera-issued violations.
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