Calls for Tougher Enforcement After 2 Die on Bridge Bike Path

One of the victims involved in a deadly collision on the Queensboro Bridge on the morning of May 28 was riding a standup scooter another was driving a high end pedal powered bike. Both were killed. Bike advocates are calling for tougher enforcement and new laws.

| 29 May 2026 | 08:05

Two people were killed in a head on collision in the bike lane on the Queensboro Bridge on the morning of May 28, prompting calls for tougher laws and enforcement of the 15 MPH speed limits for e-bikes that is already in effect.

Police identified the victims at Dmytro Stechenko, 35, who was driving a high end pedal bike and Francis Del Valle, 39, who was on a standup scooter that is able to reach speeds of up to 53 MPH and which is already banned in NYC.

Del Valle was traveling westbound heading into Manhattan on a scooter identified as a Blade GT II. Stechenko was heading east on a pedal only racing bike on the downhill portion of the bridge. Both victims were transported to New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Hospital but were pronounced dead.

“Crashes like these are entirely preventable,” said Ben Furnas, executive director of Transportation Alternatives, a bike advocacy group. “Scooters that travel this quickly have no place in our bike lanes.:

He said that the e-scooter involved in the head on collision was an illegal device that can travel up to 53 mph. The e-scooter is illegal to ride on the street but easy to purchase online.

“The City Council must move forward with the ‘Ride Safe, Ride Right’ bill to prevent the sale of the most dangerous micro-mobility devices. 20 mph is plenty for anything on New York City neighborhood streets, and certainly in our bike lanes. The data is clear: anything faster than 20 mph is especially deadly. 20 is plenty—no matter who you are or how you’re traveling. Speed kills.”

When Straus News visited the crash site on the morning after the crash, we were surprised to not see any extra police vigilance on the bridge and plenty of speeding scooters and mopeds in the bike lane.

People who were on the Queensboro Bridge the day after the deadly crash were still rattled by the events the preceding day. In May 2025, the then-Mayor Eric Adams separated what used to be a shared lane for bicyclists and pedestrians, addressing safety concerns regarding the chaotic lane. Bikes moved to a two way bike lane on the north side where the deadly crash occurred on May 27, pedestrians on what was supposed to be their own lanes were moved to the south side.

Despite this improvement, residents that Straus News spoke with remain frustrated with what they see as the neglect of safety on the bridge, for both pedestrians and bicyclists.

“I don’t bike there anymore,” said a person on the pedestrian side of the bridge who identified herself as Jennifer. “It’s not safe. You have people going 30, 40 miles an hour honking at you.” She calls herself an avid bicyclist who nevertheless avoids biking on the Queensboro Bridge due to the increase of electric bikes, scooters, and mopeds on the “Bikes Only” path in recent years.

Bikes frequently enter the pedestrian walkway on the south side of the bridge and disturb the lane. “They go so fast. The bikes shouldn’t be here,” said Ken, a Manhattan resident who said he walks the bridge three times a week to reach his gym in Queens. “They’ve got their own lane.”

Mayor Zohran Mamdani weighed in on the tragedy as well.

Jeremy Edwards said the Mamdani administration would continue to fight illegal vehicles.

“This terrible tragedy is a grim reminder that illegal, high-speed micro-mobility devices, like the standup e-scooter involved in this incident, are dangerous and have no place on our roadways or bike paths,” said Mamdani spokesman Jeremy Edwards. “Every New Yorker deserves to feel safe, and the Mamdani Administration will continue working to remove these illegal devices from our streets and bring accountability to micro-mobility use.”