High school mourns for its two seniors killed in Dix Hills crash
BY ZACHARY R. DOWDY
April 27, 2007, 10:35 PM EDT
Speed killed them.
Two high school seniors were going more than 100 mph in a 2007 BMW 335i, weaving in-and-out of traffic, police said Friday, when the car left the road, struck a tree and smashed into "a thousand pieces."
The 8:27 p.m. crash Thursday on the Northern State Parkway ended the lives of two 17-year-olds, Giacomo Alfieri, of Merrick, and Michael Moniz, of Bellmore.
Their deaths left two families, two neighborhoods and a school in mourning for the two youngsters described as "intelligent, considerate and vivacious."
The car's velocity caused so much damage that veteran first-responders and investigators said it was among the most horrific of their careers.
"It was the worst crash that I've seen," said Eric Baez, a 19-year veteran investigator who said that excessive speed was the main cause of the crash on the eastbound side the parkway in Dix Hills.
Baez stood in front of the wreckage at the impound lot during a news conference at State Police headquarters in Farmingdale Friday, saying the young men died of "massive blunt force trauma." He added that the debris from the crash, which occurred on a wooded median, was flung as far as 150 feet from the point of impact.
Police said the car was registered to the father of Alfieri, the presumed driver. Police could not determine whether the victims were wearing seatbelts.
"We have tons of witnesses saying they were driving at a very high rate of speed," said Trooper Frank Bandiero, a spokesman. "The car was ripped into a thousand pieces."
Baez said that standard toxicology tests would determine whether drugs or alcohol were a factor but results will not be available for several weeks.
Dix Hills Fire Chief Larry Feld said the car and the victims' bodies were grossly severed, and that authorities used a heat-seeking device to make sure there weren't more victims.
"You can't imagine how bad this accident was," Feld said.
Its impact was felt in the tight circle that five teenage boys formed as they sobbed and hugged each other openly on the Bellmore street where they had so often visited Giacomo, fondly called "Jack."
Indeed, bands of kids came to the home throughout the day, offering support and condolences in the same place where they sought comfort -- among classmates and friends who knew the two boys.
The teenagers were too broken up to comment, as were the relatives of the two victims.
At least one unidentified teenager grieved privately, holding his palms to his eyes, elbows on knees, as he sat on the porch of Giacomo's home.
In Bellmore, John F. Kennedy High School administrators called in extra grief counselors.
Students of all races, genders and ages sought help, said Frank Sansanelli, a guidance counselor. "We give them counseling but it does not change the sad truth," he said.
It may have struck the school particularly hard because the boys were so popular.
"Michael Moniz was an intelligent young man with great promise," said Principal Lorraine Poppe. "Always a gentleman with a big smile, Michael conducted himself with kindness, good manners, good humor and grace throughout his years at Kennedy High School."
Poppe also said Giacomo was a "dependable, motivated and considerate young man."
She added: "He was well respected for his wonderful personal qualities. Inside and outside of school, Jack was a responsible student and a dedicated worker who devoted many hours to his family restaurant business."
Moniz's neighbor, Verneta Goffe, whose son Justin, 16, had known Moniz for seven years and played video games and watched movies with him.
"Mike was a good kid, always had a smile on his face, always had a wave," she said.
Emerson Clarridge and staff writer Dave Marcus contributed to this story.
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~ young age, inexperience, stupity and a fast car don't mix.