close
close

“I am happy to be alive: 'Hit-and-run victims remember the proximity of death


From Pavlina Osta

Click here to get updates to this story

Milwaukee (WDJT)-A Milwaukee man recovered after a close experience last Thursday. He was hit and left in the middle of the street after a car was rammed into it.

Now he wants their help to look for the person involved.

“I am happy to be alive. I'm really happy to be more or less in one piece,” said Tony Wiener, hit-and-run victims.

It is a moment when Tony Wiener did not see.

“I looked in both directions, I was very careful to walk across the street,” said Wiener.

Wiener watched the NFL design in Club Brady in E. Brady and Warren Street. When he walked across the street, a black Honda hit him directly. The surveillance video shows how it happened.

“Someone wiped up a turnaround and hit me head -on, and I fell directly onto the car of the car,” said Wiener. When I was lying on the floor in the Brady Street, I thought that this guy will talk to me? Will this person see if I am at least doing well? But no, they just started. “

The collision collision fittings board of motor vehicles shows E. Brady Street.

Wiener says he knows first -hand how dangerous the area can be.

“One of my good friends was actually killed, two of my other friends were killed, almost killed and now I'm another victim,” said Wiener.

A better Brady Street says that Brady Street will continue to have problems with accidents that kill pedestrians and cyclists until sufficient strong traffic measures are taken.

“I wouldn't wish anyone that is a terrible experience,” said Wiener.

Before his interview with CBS 58, Wiener was at the doctor because of his injuries. He says he has a long way to recover.

“I sprained my foot, my ankle, my hips are all mixed up, injured shin, injured knee, back pain. I was only with the doctor, they told myself to make it calm,” said Wiener.

He hopes someone knows the driver.

“I am ready to forgive and forget. Just get involved, show a decency,” said Wiener.

He has a message for the driver and the city of Milwaukee.

“I was fed up. I can't bury another friend about something like that. I can't see how another friend is injured and actually goes through the trauma. It is an rude awakening,” said Wiener.

If you have information, contact the Milwaukee police at (414) 935-7212 or contact Crime Stopper at (414) 224 tips or P3 tips.

Please note: This content has a strict local market bargo. If you share the same market as the contribution of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Leave a Comment