The 19-year-old woman who was one of the two teens killed when their bike crashed on the Cross Island Parkway lived in the present and was in a race against time, her sad twin sister said on Sunday.
Death victim It was planned for Giselle Flores to get a ride home early Saturday morning and then spend the weekend with her twin brother Sharick Flores. She never got home, though.
Her body was found on a Queens highway after the 15-year-old boy she was riding with lost control of their two-wheeler.
Giselle called her sister an hour before the crash. She was out with a friend of the twins.
“I asked her, ‘Why are you still out?'” “Don’t worry, I’ll have some friends pick me up,” she said. He told The Post, “I’ll go home and see you at 5 in the morning.” “She never came home.”
Police say an SUV hits and kills a rider on a New York City street before hitting a parked car.
“When the motorcycles came to pick her up, she told my best friend, ‘Hey, get on.'” Let’s ride. “We only live once.”
Giselle, who lives in Queens, and her friend got on two different mopeds. The sister said that Giselle went with Andy Rodriguez, a teen she had just met that night.
Around 2 a.m., Rodriguez lost control on the highway and hit a car, sending the two of them flying into a wall near 150th Street, Sharick said the friend told her.
The friend’s riding partner dropped her off on the side of the road so that she could get Andy and rush him to the hospital, where he was declared dead.
Six-year-old boy was one of eight people killed in a bus crash in Mississippi.
At the same time, the friend called Sharick in a panic while Giselle was still not moving.
“She breathes and moves but doesn’t.” She has cuts. I do not know what to do. He remembered, “I told them, ‘Bro, call 911,’ but they did it already.” “When I got to the emergency room to see her, they told me my sister had died.”
“In the end, I saw my best friend’s legs and shoes covered in my sister’s blood.” “I woke her up, but she wouldn’t wake up,” she said.
Sharick told them that their mother is “so devastated” as they try to raise money for the funeral.
She told her sister, “She’s better than my best friend.” After Giselle graduated from high school in November, they both wanted to go to college together.
“She was everything to me.” “Sharon and I have been through a lot,” he said. “We think the same way.” We share the same views.
We both wanted to study medicine in college for the same reason. I was going to be an ultrasound tech and she was going to be a nurse.
But Sharick also said that her sister “always knew this was going to happen because she believed that we only live once.”
To spend the weekend with her sister, Sharick, who lives upstate, was meant to drive down to Queens and pick her up. She would then bring her back up to upstate.
“She said, ‘What do you know? “We’re going to do this, that, and jet skis, among other things.” It was Sharick.
“I told her to calm down, but she said, ‘No, baby, we’re going to do all of this because what if I die tomorrow?’ I was shocked.” She always thought, “What if we die?” Today is all we have to live for.
The crash that killed one person is still being looked into, and no one has been arrested yet.
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