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Friday, July 30, 2021
Vol. 9, No. 31
HEALTH & WELLNESS
TOWN, COUNTY TO LAVINE WARNS CUOMO BOYCOTT BEN & JERRY’S ON AIDE’S COMMENT
PAGES 19-23
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Manhasset men die in crash Ryan Kiess, brothers Michael and James Farrell passengers in collision that took 5 lives BY S A M U E L E PETRUCCELLI A man driving along a narrow highway in Quogue crashed headon into an oncoming Uber, killing three young Manhasset residents riding in the hired vehicle, local police said. Approaching midnight on a winding strip of the Montauk Highway last Saturday, the driver veered on the two-lane road and collided with a Toyota Prius carrying the Manhasset passengers, according to Quogue police. The drivers of both cars were also killed, raising the death toll to five. Among the fatalities were Ryan Kiess, 25, and brothers Michael Farrell, 20, and James Farrell, 25 — all of whom lived in Manhasset and graduated from Manhasset High School. The crash also killed Uber driver PHOTO COURTESY OF STEVE CUNHA Farhan Zahid, 32, of Bay Shore; and Manhasset resident James Farrell was one of five people, including his brother Michael, to die Justin Mendez, 22, of Brookhaven, who slammed into Zahid’s car, poin a car crash in Quogue on Saturday evening.
lice said. Mendez, the sole occupant and driver of a red Nissan Maxima, crossed into oncoming traffic and struck Zahid’s Prius that was carrying the Farrells, Kiess and 22-yearold Brianna Maglio of Garden City, according to police. Maglio remains in critical condition at South Shore University Hospital. Quogue police said Mendez’s excessive speed may have played a role in the crash. At a news conference midday on Tuesday, Quogue Police Chief Christopher Isola said a radar reading from officer who saw Mendez heading west before the crash recorded his car traveling at 55 mph. The speed limit at the site of the crash is 40 mph. Isola also said some marijuana was found in the passenger compartment of Mendez’s vehicle, but he did not say how much or whether the drug played any role in the crash. Continued on Page 27
Petruccelli: Warrior on, off the field BY R OB E RT PELAEZ
hopes that will educate others about the world of women’s sports. Petruccelli’s family is one with Manhasset resident Susie Pe- deep roots in the sports world, with truccelli’s journey to become an both her father and grandfather award-winning author is one she playing football at the high school
and collegiate level. Growing up in Los Angeles, her idols ranged from Magic Johnson and the Showtime Lakers to Dodger greats Fernando Valenzuela and Steve Garvey. “At a really young age I very naively assumed that I would be able to follow their footsteps into American footballand baseball but, of course, those opportunities never came,” Petruccelli said in an
interview with Blank Slate Media. Thanks to the establishment of Title IX in 1972, Petruccelli was able to start her own journey to become a sports icon for the millions of other girls who did not participate in sports at the time and the millions who would eventually do so. By the age of 5, Petruccelli and her twin sister laced up their cleats and began to play soccer. Petruc-
celli said the love for the sport and the competitive atmosphere while being on the same field as the boys was incredible. “From that very first day of playing soccer, I was just completely in love and obsessed with it,” she said. “I basically rode that soccer wave through the Olympic Development Program and U.S. Club Soccer.” Continued on Page 36
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