Young Artist Killed By Truck While Cycling To Work

A 27-year-old cyclist who worked as an artist in the Brooklyn Navy Yard was killed by a truck yesterday morning.

Leah Sylvain was riding northbound in the bike lane on Evergreen Avenue when she was struck by a Peterbilt truck driven by 52-year-old Joseph Cherry as it turned left onto Hart Street on June 7 at about 6:45am, according to the NYPD. She was pronounced dead at Woodhull Hospital, say police.

Cherry was also riding northbound on Evergreen Avenue when he made a left turn on Hart Street and hit Sylvain, according to cops.

Syvlain worked as a charge scenic painter at Scenicorp in the Brooklyn Navy Yard, and was on her usual commute to work, according to the New York Post.

The Post reports:

“I couldn’t think straight. My heart just dropped,” said the woman’s roommate, Tina Duran, 45.
“It’s shocking. She was always a happy girl with a smile on her face.”
“I used to tell her to be careful because there are lots of crazies out there,” Duran added. “She would say, ‘Yeah, I know, I will be careful.’”

Cherry has been charged with four counts including failure to yield to a bicyclist and and failure to exercise due care, according to police.

The intersection of Evergreen Avenue and Hart Street (courtesy Google Maps.)

According to CBS2 New York:

Anthony Cherry said his father was behind the wheel of the truck and stopped immediately when they heard a loud “boom.”
“We thought we hit a car and it was actually person,” said Cherry, who was in the passenger seat of the truck at the time of the crash. “I was so traumatized. I freaked out.”

Unfortunately, there have been several bike-related fatalities recently.

In April, James Gregg, co-owner of The Great Georgiana (248 DeKalb Avenue), was struck and killed while riding his bike in Prospect Heights.

The Great Georgiana’s tribute to its fallen co-owner. (Courtesy Fort Greene Focus/Justin Fox)

Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams led a bike tour in April to mourn the loss of Gregg and another fallen bicyclist, Lauren Davis.

Bike lanes have been a hot topic in the neighborhood. Last month, the Department of Transit withdrew plans for a bike lane on Clinton Avenue after significant community opposition.