Crime & Safety
Victim In Upper East Side Crash Identified; Driver Arrested: NYPD
The woman killed in Monday's crash on East 76th Street lived just a couple of blocks away, police said. The driver has now been charged.

UPPER EAST SIDE, NY — Police have identified the victim in Monday's fatal crash on East 76th Street as an Upper East Side woman who lived just a couple of blocks away.
Udeshi Shruti Sundeep, 51, was killed Monday morning when the driver of an Audi sedan struck her in the intersection of East 76th Street while turning onto Third Avenue, police said.
Sundeep lived on East 76th Street near Second Avenue, according to authorities.
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Hours later on Monday, police also announced that they had arrested the driver, Connette Bercik: a 59-year-old resident of Oldwick, New Jersey. Bercik was charged with failure to yield to a pedestrian, police said.
Responding to a 911 call at 6:37 a.m. Monday, police found Sundeep unconscious and unresponsive, with trauma to the body and head. She was rushed to Lenox Hill Hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
Find out what's happening in Upper East Sidefor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Initially, police announced no charges against Bercik, saying she had stayed at the scene.
Local officials expressed outrage about Sundeep's death, which was followed just hours later by another fatal crash on the Upper West Side that took the life of a 43-year-old woman.

Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine said that the city's recent spate of traffic deaths "simply can't continue," while City Councilmember Julie Menin tweeted that "We need immediate investment in traffic calming measures at this site."
Some residents sounded exasperated by the city's slow pace when it comes to redesigning streets.
"So do it," one person wrote in response to Menin. "Tomorrow."
Since 2011, at least 12 people have been injured in a dozen crashes at the same intersection of Third Avenue and East 76th Street, according to city data. Those injured included eight pedestrians, two drivers and two cyclists.
Monday's crashes also came weeks after a pair of fatal collisions on the Upper East Side took the lives of three men — all of them immigrant workers, including two delivery cyclists — and spurred calls for safety reforms.
Mayor Eric Adams vowed last week to redesign 1,000 intersections across the city, adding raised crosswalks, bike corrals, turn signals and other traffic-calming measures to improve safety.
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