British Woman Awarded $150k After Losing Leg in NYC Taxi Accident
British Woman Awarded $150k After Losing Leg in NYC Taxi Accident
A British woman was awarded a paltry sum nearly six years after losing her leg in a gruesome taxi accident.The lawsuit initially sought $27.5 million. Last week, Sian Green and her attorneys settled for much, much less: $150,000.Speaking of the award, Green’s attorney, Dan Marchese, called the outcome “terrible.”“This is a really horrific story,” he said.The crash, writes the New York Daily News¸ occurred in August of 2013. Then-23-year-old Green was vacationing in Manhattan when a bike messenger and taxi driver got into a heated argument.Moments later, the cabbie went off-road on Sixth Avenue, plowing atop a sidewalk near the Rockefeller Center.Green, recounts the Daily News¸ was eating a hot dog when the taxi ran into her. Pushed back against a fountain, the woman almost bled to death on the spot. Her leg was later amputated.The lawsuit, lodged against New York and the taxi driver, argued that cabbie Faysal Himon had such a bad driving record that his license should’ve been revoked.Himon, Marchese wrote in a 2014 document, had seven points on his license for motor vehicle violations. And seven points, in New York, should’ve been sufficient to trigger an automatic license suspension.
A TLC taxi medallion affixed to a New York City taxi. Image via Wikimedia Commons/user:Danielle Lupkin. (CCA-BY-2.0).
Sources
British tourist in horror taxi cab accident sues New York for $27.5 millionBritish tourist who lost leg in 2013 taxi crash ends legal battle with only $150,000 settlementSian Green, British Tourist Who Lost Leg After Cab Jumped Curb, To Sue NYC For MillionsTaxi victim Sian Green will file $27.5M lawsuit against New York City
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.