Crime & Safety

Queens Man Guilty Of Hit-And-Run Sentenced

After striking the tow truck driver, the man circled back to view the scene.

NEW ROCHELLE, NY — The Queens man guilty of the hit-and-run death of a tow truck operator on I-95 in New Rochelle in December 2016 was sentenced Tuesday. Westchester County District Attorney Anthony A. Scarpino Jr. said Anthony Mangano of Ozone Park, 53, was sentenced to the 12 months he has already served in the Westchester County Jail.

Mangano had pleaded guilty in December 2017 to leaving the scene of a personal injury incident resulting in death, a felony, and was sent to the Westchester County Jail.

On Dec. 29, 2016, Mangano was driving a box truck for his employer, a Long Island-based auto parts company. He was traveling north on I-95 and had just passed the New Rochelle toll plaza when he struck and killed Salvatore Brescia, 32, of Connecticut.

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Brescia, employed as a tow truck operator with a Westchester-based company, was assisting a driver whose vehicle was broken down on the side of the highway. At the time he was hit, Brescia was standing in the right lane next to his truck.

Mangano continued driving. He exited I-95 north and circled back to view the scene. At that time, state police and an ambulance had responded. Mangano again went through the New Rochelle toll plaza, passed the scene and proceeded northbound to Connecticut. At no time did he stop to report his involvement or provide information to police.

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Brescia died of his injuries, which consisted of blunt impact injury to his head, neck, torso and extremities. He was struck by the right side view mirror of the truck driven by Mangano.

An intensive investigation by the New York State Police consisted of collecting fragments of the plastic from the broken mirror at the scene. This in turn led them to the company in Ontario, Canada, that manufactured the plastic mirror and local distributors of the mirror which eventually led to the Mangano’s employer.

State police investigators were able to identify Mangano as the driver who left the scene on I-95 on the day of the incident. E-ZPass and cellphone records were also instrumental in this investigation.


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