Motorcyclist William Sarubbi’s death in Manorville crash adds to fatal toll
A Riverhead man riding a motorcycle late Monday afternoon on the Long Island Expressway in Manorville was killed when the bike crashed into the back of a pickup truck, the Suffolk County police said.
William Sarubbi, 37, was heading east at 5:46 p.m. on a 2014 Suzuki when he hit the back of a 2024 Ford F250 pickup just east of Exit 68, according to a Suffolk County police news release. Sarubbi was ejected from the motorcycle before a 2022 Mitsubishi swerved to avoid him and hit the bike, police said.
An ambulance transported Sarubbi to Peconic Bay Medical Center in Riverhead where he was pronounced dead.
The drivers of the Ford and the Mitsubishi both escaped injury, according to police.
Additional details, including the speed of the vehicles at the time or the circumstances leading up to the crash, were not immediately released.
Police impounded the three vehicles for a safety check and anyone with information should contact Seventh Squad detectives at (631) 852-8752.
Monday’s fatal crash was the latest on Long Island involving a motorcyclist and followed several others within the past two months. A Queens motorcyclist, Richard Sorrentino, 34, was pronounced dead Nov. 8 from injuries suffered Oct. 12 after he struck a bicyclist attempting to cross Sunrise Highway in Bellmore.
On Oct. 21, a Medford man was charged with driving while intoxicated following a crash on the LIE in Islandia that killed motorcyclist Idris Shehu, 20, of Hicksville.
The day before, Oct, 20, a motorcycle crash claimed the life of Nassau County Supreme Court Justice Dawn M. Jimenez, a passenger on a 2007 Harley-Davidson motorcycle whose operator was treated at a hospital for serious injuries.
On Sept. 16, Michael Rampanelli, 21, of Syosset, died after the 2022 Honda motorcycle he was operating collided with a car in Oyster Bay Cove.
In July, Newsday reported a surge in deadly motorcycle crashes on Long Island. At least 12 people were killed in crashes in May and June. For the same time period in 2023, at least six people died in motorcycle crashes, according to a Newsday analysis.
The spike in fatalities was also a state and nationwide trend, according to Newsday’s July story, with preliminary statistics revealing a close to 12% jump in New York from 2022 to 2023.
Factors linked to the crashes included loss of control, speeding and vehicles making a left turn in front of an oncoming motorcycle, police said.
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