NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New Jersey man was arrested on Tuesday and charged
for his role in a high-speed chase along a Manhattan highway that ended when
a motorcycle gang dragged a New York man from his vehicle and beat him
while his wife and baby looked on, police said.
Christopher Cruz, 28, of Passaic, New Jersey, was charged with reckless
endangerment, reckless driving, menacing and endangering the welfare of a
child, said Sergeant Lee Jones of the New York City Police Department.
"The investigation is continuing with regards to other participants in this
assault," Jones said.
Cruz was arrested early Tuesday after he was asked to come to the NYPD's
33rd Precinct, Jones said.
The chase and subsequent attack on Sunday were captured by a video camera
attached to the helmet of one of the motorcyclists and posted online on
Monday.
The video appears to show an accident involving the victim's sport utility
vehicle and one of dozens of motorcycles being driven north on the Henry
Hudson Parkway in upper Manhattan.
The video showed the group of bikers suddenly slowing and stopping en masse,
bringing northbound traffic to a halt.
The SUV, a dark-colored Range Rover, suddenly accelerated, rolling over
several motorcycles and knocking at least one rider to the ground.
The video then showed dozens of motorcyclists giving chase and catching the
driver in traffic in upper Manhattan's Washington Heights.
The driver was dragged from the SUV and beaten, according Police
Commissioner Ray Kelly.
"He's taken out of the car," Kelly told reporters. "He's assaulted."
The victim, identified only as a resident of New York City, was treated for
facial lacerations and chest wounds at New York-Presbyterian Hospital,
according to a police source.
A police source said authorities believed the motorcyclists who chased the
SUV were part of a large group that had planned an unauthorized gathering in
New York on Sunday. This was similar to an event last year, when the riders
organized online and gathered in large groups in Times Square without
permission, the source said.
This year, the police source said, authorities set up a series of
checkpoints at bridges and tunnels to prevent the motorcycle group from
gathering in large numbers in the city.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg and Chris Francescani; Editing by Scott
Malone and Lisa Von Ahn)