Saturday, January 2

Man, 25, crushed to death in LES elevator after pushing a woman to safety

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At approximately 11:30 p.m. on New Year’s Day, tragedy struck at an apartment building in New York City as a man who had been stuck in a stalled elevator plummeted to his death. The police and eye witnesses have stated that the man died a hero, pushing a woman to safety with his final words being “Happy New Year.”


Twenty-five-year old Stephen Hewett-Brown lives in the Bronx and was attending a New Year’s Eve party on the Lower East Side of Manhattan when the elevator in the Broome St. apartment building stalled between the second and third floors, trapping him and nine other passengers. Reports say that eventually the door of the elevator opened, and unfortunately Hewett-Brown became stuck between the building door and the elevator. The woman Stephen saved was 45-year-old building resident Erude Sanchez, who was just about to step onto the elevator when it started to fall. Her life was saved when he pushed her up and out of the elevator onto the third floor, wishing her a “Happy New Year.”

Hewett-Brown’s body became trapped between the slowly falling elevator and the door of the building, and it slowly began crushing him. Manuel Coronado had been visiting his grandmother in the building and attempted to save Hewett-Brown from the elevators clutches, to no avail. The 23-year-old told the New York Daily News that he will never forget the last words that the hero said to him as he tried to do the impossible and lift the elevator.

“I tried to help the guy, but he was between the elevator and the building door. He was saying ‘I can’t breathe.’ “I tried to pull him up, but he said ‘Leave me here, leave me here.'”
Coronado took the time to also translate the tale of the horrific elevator tragedy for Erude Sanchez, whom Stephen saved, and who spoke in Spanish.
“She started going in, but the elevator started going down and he pushed her out. He said ‘Happy New Year’ and pushed her out.”

Coronado relayed that he and the other passengers of the elevator dialled 911 in a desperate attempt to save Hewett-Brown, but their response time was allegedly about 20 to 30 minutes, despite the fact that the 7th Precinct Station House is right in front of the 26-storey apartment building. They said the wait was agonizing. When the New York City police eventually arrived, it was to find the hero in the elevator shaft, unconscious and unresponsive with severe body trauma. The courageous man was rushed to the New York Presbyterian/ Lower Manhattan Hospital. A spokesman for the Fire Department of New York advised that Stephen could not be saved and was pronounced dead at the hospital.

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