4 THE QUEENS COURIER • JULY 25, 2019  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 Man found dead inside a parked  
 car on a Flushing street: NYPD 
 BY EMILY DAVENPORT 
 edavenport@qns.com 
 @QNS 
 Police are investigating the death of a  
 man who was found inside of a hot car  
 parked in Flushing on Sunday evening. 
 At around 5:50 p.m. on July 21, police  
 received a 911 call regarding an unconscious  
 man in a car parked across from  
 26-30 169th St. Upon their arrival, offi  cers  
 from the 109th Precinct found the man,  
 who has yet to be identifi ed, unconscious  
 and unresponsive in the driver’s seat. 
 EMS responded to the location and  
 pronounced the victim dead at the scene. 
 Police say that the car had been parked  
 in the area from around 10:30 a.m. to 6  
 p.m. that night before the witness discovered  
 the victim’s body in the car. 
 No arrests have been made at this time.  
 Th  e investigation is ongoing. 
 Flushing mom sentenced for  
 killing daughter and abusing son 
 BY ROBERT POZARYCKI 
 rpozarycki@qns.com 
 @robbpoz 
 A  30-year-old  Flushing  
 woman who raised twin babies  
 in a “house of horrors” received  
 a 12-year prison sentence  
 on Th  ursday for her role in  
 repeated abuse that led to her  
 13-month-old daughter’s death  
 and nearly killed her twin  
 brother back in October 2018. 
 Tina Torabi, 30, of Ashby  
 Avenue in the Auburndale  
 section of Flushing pleaded  
 guilty back in May to fi rst-degree  
 assault and second-degree  
 manslaughter. 
 Her 13-month-old daughter, 
  Elaina, died of injuries  
 related to fatal child abuse  
 syndrome,  the  Medical  
 Examiner’s offi  ce determined.  
 Elaina’s twin brother suff ered a litany of  
 injuries also related to child abuse syndrome  
 — and nine months later, he is still  
 recovering from them, according to acting  
 Queens District Attorney John Ryan. 
 “Th  e baby twins lived in a house of horrors  
 with their siblings,” Ryan said on July  
 18. “Th  e mother of these children had a  
 responsibility — not just to provide food  
 and clothing. She had an obligation to protect  
 them from harm. Instead, the baby  
 girl is dead as a result of profound physical  
 abuse. Th  e girl’s twin brother had a long list  
 of ghastly injuries.” 
 Offi  cers from the 111th Precinct and  
 EMS units responded to the Torabi home  
 at 10 p.m. on Oct. 3, 2018, aft er she called  
 911 to report that Elaina had lost consciousness. 
  Upon arriving at their home,  
 fi rst responders found her fi ve children —  
 including her twin babies and three older  
 siblings — living inside a dirty basement  
 apartment. 
 Elaina was pronounced dead at the scene.  
 Prosecutors said that an autopsy determined  
 she had been dead for at least 24  
 hours before her mother called 911 for  
 help. Th  e baby’s death was ruled a homicide. 
 Paramedics rushed Elaina’s twin brother  
 to a hospital on Long Island for treatment  
 of numerous injuries related to child abuse,  
 including multiple rib fractures, lung contusions, 
  a fractured pelvis, a visibly healing  
 bite mark, a tibia fracture and an adrenal  
 hemorrhage. 
 Th  e babies’ siblings — ages 5, 4 and 2 —  
 were found unattended in the basement  
 apartment. Th  ey were placed in the custody  
 of the Administration for Children’s  
 Services. Th  ey had been removed from  
 Tina Torabi’s custody back in 2017 amid a  
 drug use investigation, but later returned to  
 their mother aft er the probe proved inconclusive. 
 Days aft er the child’s death, Mohammed  
 Torabi — Tina’s estranged husband and  
 the children’s father — jumped to his  
 death from a Manhattan high-rise hotel.  
 According to published reports, Tina  
 allegedly told investigators that he had  
 beaten the children, and police had been  
 looking to question him for his role in the  
 fatal child abuse. 
 On July 18, Queens Supreme Court  
 Justice Richard Buchter ordered Tina  
 Torabi to serve concurrent sentences of  
 four to 12 years in prison for the manslaughter  
 charge and 8 1/2 years behind  
 bars for the assault count. 
 “Th  e defendant will have a long time  
 to dwell on her failures that led to her  
 own child’s death and to the other baby’s  
 extreme suff ering,” Ryan added on July 18.  
 “Th  e sentence imposed by the Court today  
 is more than warranted.” 
 Whitestone intersection gets  
 long-awaited all-way stop sign 
 BY JENNA BAGCAL 
 jbagcal@qns.com 
 @jenna_bagcal 
 A busy Whitestone intersection  
 just got a lot safer. 
 Councilman  Paul  
 Vallone  announced  
 that  the  Department  of  
 Transportation  installed  a  
 new stop sign at the intersection  
 of 163rd Street and  
 24th  Road  in  the  northeast  
 Queens neighborhood.  
 Residents Cyrille Kousiaris  
 and Salvatore Cippo began  
 advocating  for  increased  
 safety measures at this intersection  
 in 2008. 
 Prior  to  the  stop  sign  
 installation, there was a sixblock  
 stretch  along  163rd  
 Street without a stop sign  
 where cars would constantly  
 speed. 
 “Th  is  long-awaited  traffi  
 c  control  is  a  win  for  
 Whitestone and the residents  
 of  163rd  Street  who  have  
 been petitioning for safety measures for  
 over a decade,” said Councilman Paul  
 Vallone. “I thank Cyrille Kousiaris and  
 Salvatore Cippo for their advocacy and  
 Queens Borough Commissioner Nicole  
 Garcia for working closely with my offi  ce  
 on this issue.” 
 In 2013, Kousaris and Cippo circulated  
 and submitted a petition to DOT asking  
 the agency to implement much-needed  
 safety measures on 163rd Street to  
 reduce the speeding. In December 2018,  
 Cippo  contacted  Vallone  to  report  a  
 series of car collisions at the intersection. 
 Following the crashes, Vallone penned  
 a  letter  to  DOT  Queens  Borough  
 Commissioner Nicole Garcia asking the  
 agency to conduct a traffi  c study at the  
 location. Th  e councilman fi rst  reached  
 out to DOT concerning this issue in  
 2014. 
 “Finally, aft er 11 years and innumerable  
 car accidents, the four-way stop  
 signs were installed on July 15, 2019,”  
 said Kousiaris. “Without the help of  
 Councilman Paul Vallone, I am sure this  
 would not have been done. He took the  
 lead and made the impossible happen,  
 proving to my neighbors and me that  
 some offi  cials do listen to the people and  
 are there for their community. On behalf  
 of my neighbors on 163rd Street, I would  
 like to thank Councilman Vallone and  
 the DOT for making this happen.” 
 In the past, Vallone has advocated for  
 other all-way stop signs in Whitestone,  
 including one at 17th Road and Murray  
 Street. Th  e intersection was the site of a  
 hit-and-run that left  a 71-year-old critically  
 injured back in 2017. 
 “In 2007, I moved to a corner house in  
 Whitestone, and soon aft er I started to  
 see accidents due to speeding on 163rd  
 Street and poor visibility on the adjacent  
 road,” said Cippo. “In the last 12 years,  
 Cyrille has lost two new cars to accidents  
 and my house was hit by a car. I  
 contacted Paul Vallone’s offi  ce and I was  
 instructed to inform them of any new  
 accident. A new stop sign was installed  
 on July 15, saving someone from injury  
 or possible death.” 
 Photo by Robert Stridiron 
 Photo courtesy of Council Member Vallone’s offi  ce 
 Photo: Jenna Bagcal/QNS, with inset via Facebook 
 
				
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