NEW YORK — Halena Herrera can't cross a street without thinking about the pickup truck that barreled toward her, killing her best friend and three other people, at a New York City park two Fourth of Julys ago.
Daniel Hyden was drunk at the wheel as the Ford F-150 jumped a curb, bulldozed a chain-link fence and plowed into a group of friends and relatives who were holding a holiday barbecue at Corlears Hook Park in Manhattan. The truck stopped just feet from Herrera, its momentum halted by bodies trapped underneath.
Judge April A. Newbauer sentenced Hyden on Friday to 24 years to life in prison in the deaths of Ana Morel, 43; Lucille Pinkney, 59; her son, Herman Pinkney, 38; and Herrera's best friend, Emily Ruiz, 30.
Seven people were hurt, including Herrera, who was hit in the face by debris.
''Learning that the only reason I lived was because four other people were dying under the car is still very hard to deal with,'' Herrera told reporters after Hyden's sentencing in state court in Manhattan.
''I'm glad that at least now there's some sense of justice," she said. "It doesn't help much. It doesn't bring anything back, but it's good to have it over with, so I'm happy for that.''
Diamond Pinkney, Lucille's son and Herman's brother, said seeing Hyden sentenced was a ''big relief." The driver, a substance abuse counselor who wrote a 2020 book about coping with addiction, ''knew what he did, he knew the possibility he could've caused and he did it,'' Pinkney said.
Hyden, 46, from Monmouth, New Jersey, described it as an ''accident'' in his courtroom apology. He was convicted in November at a non-jury trial of murder, aggravated vehicular homicide and other charges.