Police continue to search for the driver of a BMW and a
passenger who fled an accident after slamming into a livery cab, killing
a young pregnant woman and her husband.
Their unborn baby survived. Nachman and Raizy Glauber, both 21, were
looking forward to welcoming their first child into their tight-knit
community of Orthodox Jews. Now the infant must be raised by relatives
and neighbors.
The horrific crash happened in the Williamsburg
section of Brooklyn as the couple headed to a hospital, said Isaac
Abraham, a neighbor of Raizy Glauber's parents who lives two blocks from
where the crash happened.
The engine of the livery car ended up
in the backseat, where Raizy Glauber, who was seven months pregnant, was
sitting before she was ejected, Abraham said. Her body landed under a
parked tractor-trailer, said witnesses who raced to the scene after the
crash. Nachman Glauber was pinned in the car, and emergency workers had
to cut off the roof to get him out, witnesses said.
The Glaubers
both were pronounced dead at hospitals, and the medical examiner said
they died of blunt-force trauma. Doctors performed a cesarean section on
the mother to deliver the baby, a boy. Their son was in serious
condition, Abraham said. Neighbors and friends said the boy weighed only
about 4 pounds.
The Glaubers' livery cab driver was treated for
minor injuries at the hospital and was later released. Both the driver
of the BMW and a passenger fled and were being sought, police said. On
Saturday, Raizy Glauber "was not feeling well, so they decided to go" to
the hospital, said Sara Glauber, Nachman Glauber's cousin. Abraham said
the Glaubers called a car service because they didn't own a car, which
is common for New Yorkers.
The Glaubers were married about a year
ago and had begun a life together in Williamsburg, where Raizy Glauber
grew up in a prominent Orthodox Jewish rabbinical family, Sara Glauber
said. Raised north of New York City in Monsey, N.Y., and part of a
family that founded a line of clothing for Orthodox Jews, Nachman
Glauber was studying at a rabbinical college nearby, said his cousin.
Brooklyn
is home to the largest community of ultra-Orthodox Jews outside Israel,
more than 250,000. The community has strict rules governing clothing,
social customs and interaction with the outside world. Men wear dark
clothing that includes a long coat and a fedora-type hat and often have
long beards and ear locks. Jewish law calls for burial of the dead as
soon as possible, and hours after their deaths, the Glaubers were
mourned by at least 1,000 people at a funeral outside the Congregation
Yetev Lev D'Satmar synagogue. Afterward, the cars carrying the bodies
left and headed to Monsey, where another service was planned in Nachman
Glauber's hometown.
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