A glamorous wigmaker with a $2M NYPD payout and a “devil in her eyes” mows down a mom and her two little girls—then scores a cushy 3-9 year slap on the wrist? What twisted tale got her this “sweetheart” escape from justice? Click before the outrage boils over… you won’t believe the backstory that screams privilege gone wrong. 😡🚗💔

In the shadow of Ocean Parkway’s notorious stretch—long decried as a speeder’s playground—a once-vibrant Jewish family was erased in an instant of screeching metal and shattered lives. Eight months after Miriam Yarimi, a 33-year-old wigmaker and social media influencer known for her lavish lifestyle, allegedly barreled her Audi A3 at 68 mph through a red light, prosecutors revealed a plea deal that’s left the victims’ loved ones seething. Yarimi, who once pocketed $2 million from the NYPD in a explosive rape lawsuit, pleaded guilty last month to manslaughter, securing a sentence of just three to nine years behind bars—far short of the 15-year maximum sought by Brooklyn DA Eric Gonzalez. Brooklyn Supreme Court Judge Danny Chun’s offer, detailed in court records, has ignited a firestorm: Is this justice, or a glaring example of how trauma and celebrity status can soften the scales?
The crash that claimed Natasha Saada, 35, and her daughters Diana, 8, and Deborah, 5, unfolded like a nightmare on March 29, 2025, in Midwood’s Gravesend neighborhood. The family—devout Orthodox Jews fresh from Shabbat services at a local synagogue—had piled into an Uber for the short ride home. Saada, a soft-spoken preschool teacher with a knack for baking challah that neighbors raved about, held her youngest’s hand as they crossed Ocean Parkway near Avenue O. Her son, 4-year-old Philip, trailed close, clutching a stuffed bear from temple. What should have been a routine Sabbath evening turned apocalyptic when Yarimi’s luxury sedan, its vanity plate screaming “WIGM8KER,” T-boned the Uber’s Toyota Camry at triple the 25 mph limit.
Black box data from the Audi painted a damning picture: Yarimi floored the accelerator, never braking, as her car hurtled through the intersection and into the crosswalk. The impact hurled the Uber aside like a toy, sending Yarimi’s vehicle careening into the Saadas. Natasha was flung 50 feet, her body landing in a crumpled heap amid scattered Shabbat prayer books. Diana and Deborah, inseparable sisters who shared a bunk bed adorned with unicorn stickers, suffered fatal head trauma on the spot. Philip, the sole survivor, was airlifted to Maimonides Medical Center with a fractured skull and internal bleeding; as of last week, the boy—now orphaned and in foster care—remains in a medically induced coma, his tiny frame hooked to machines in the pediatric ICU.

Miriam Yarimi, who mowed down a Brooklyn mom and her two young daughters, scored a sweetheart plea deal.Peter Gerber

Yarimi rocketed her luxury Audi A4 down Ocean Parkway in March and crashed into an Uber.Instagram / @iitsanellie

Victims Diana (right), 7, and Deborah (left), 5, were killed, while 4-year-old Philip (middle) was severely injured.X
Eyewitnesses, including the Uber driver—a 45-year-old Pakistani immigrant named Ahmed Khan—recalled the chaos in harrowing detail during a recent victim impact hearing. “I saw the Audi coming like a bullet train, no lights, no stop,” Khan told the court, his voice trembling. “The mother screamed ‘Kids!’ and pushed the boy away. Then… silence. Blood everywhere, like a horror movie.” Khan himself escaped with whiplash, but the scene haunts him: toys from the Saadas’ car mingled with shards of windshield on the rain-slicked pavement. Another family in the Uber, Mahbuba Ahmedova and her two young children, suffered minor injuries but described the aftermath as “a miracle we breathed.” Ahmedova, clutching rosary beads in court, added: “Those little girls… they were angels. How does she sleep knowing?”
Yarimi’s post-crash meltdown only deepened the depravity. Rushed to NYU Langone Hospital-Brooklyn with minor cuts, she unleashed a profane tirade on first responders, bodycam footage shows. “What the f*** is taking so long? Get me the f*** out of here!” she bellowed from the wreckage, ignoring the wails of bystanders. At the hospital, cuffed to a gurney, she demanded: “Take me out of these cuffs! I am a wigmaker! Where’s my daughter? My daughter is always in my heart.” When pressed on the dead, Yarimi reportedly whispered, “The devil is in my eyes… I am haunted inside. I didn’t kill anyone.” Sources say she fixated on her phone, muttering about “curses” and possession, before being transferred to Bellevue’s psych ward for evaluation.
This wasn’t Yarimi’s first brush with unhinged behavior. Just months earlier, in October 2024, NYPD officers dragged her from her Borough Park apartment in a forced psych hold after a neighbor reported her wielding a hammer and screaming threats at doors. Video she later posted online—now scrubbed but archived by investigators—captures the frenzy: Yarimi, disheveled in a silk robe, howling, “You think you can silence me? I’ll sue you all!” She’s now vowing another lawsuit against the city over that incident, claiming false imprisonment, even as she fights manslaughter charges. Her driving record? A ticking bomb: 93 violations on the Audi alone, including 20 speeders and over $10,000 in unpaid fines. Suspended license? Check. Yet she cruised Brooklyn’s mean streets, flaunting her “luxe life” on Instagram under @iitsanellie—posts of designer bags, yacht parties, and custom wigs for Orthodox brides, all bankrolled by that 2023 NYPD settlement.
Ah, the lawsuit—a saga that reeks of institutional rot. At 14, Yarimi was nabbed for shoplifting at a Midwood boutique. Enter NYPD Officer Anthony Mastrokostas, then 38, who allegedly coerced her into a years-long sexual relationship under threats of jail time. Court docs detail grooming: rides home turning into assaults in his cruiser, gifts to buy silence, and harassment when she tried to break free. By 17, pregnant and terrified, Yarimi reported it to Internal Affairs. Retaliation followed—bogus stops, her mother cuffed in traffic. The city settled for $2 million in 2023, no admission of guilt, but whispers of a cover-up linger. “She turned pain into profit,” one ex-colleague told Fox News anonymously. “But does that buy her a pass on three graves?”

Brooklyn mom Natasha Saada (right) was killed.Facebook/Natasha Saada

Crash victim Mahbuba Ahmedova shows her injuries.Gabriella Bass

The horrific crash devastated south Brooklyn’s tight-knit Jewish community.Kevin C Downs for NY Post
Yarimi’s defense? A tragic spiral. Her lawyer, high-profile civil rights attorney Rachel Goodman, submitted a mitigation letter to Judge Chun detailing a “lifelong battle with PTSD and untreated trauma.” Raised in a fractured Borough Park home—father absent, mother battling depression—Yarimi channeled creativity into wigs, building a niche empire serving the Hasidic community. She has a 6-year-old daughter, now with relatives, whom she dotes on in social posts: beach days, ballet recitals. But cracks showed: erratic moods, canceled appointments, a 2022 psych hold after a suicide scare. “Miriam’s not a monster—she’s a victim of the system that failed her,” Goodman argued in court. Prosecutors countered with cold facts: no drugs or alcohol in her system, just reckless abandon.
The plea hearing on October 15 was a gut punch for the Saadas’ kin. Ari Saada, Natasha’s widower and a 38-year-old accountant, sat stone-faced as Chun floated the deal. “This isn’t vengeance,” the judge intoned, citing Yarimi’s “complex history” and low recidivism risk post-therapy. “But accountability must fit the scale of loss.” Gonzalez’s team, pushing for max time, fumed privately: “Three years? For obliterating a family? It’s a slap.” Ari, clutching photos of his girls in tutus, addressed the court: “Natasha taught them kindness. Deborah wanted to be a doctor; Diana, a singer. Philip wakes screaming for them. How’s nine years enough?” The boy, per family updates, recognizes his father’s voice but calls for “Mommy” in delirium.
Outrage erupted online, with #JusticeForSaada trending on X, amassing 150,000 posts in 48 hours. One viral thread from a Brooklyn rabbi: “A wigmaker with a cop’s blood money speeds through our streets, kills our innocents, and gets a cushy plea? Where’s the fear of God—or the law?” Community vigils lit candles along Ocean Parkway, where makeshift memorials—teddy bears, Hebrew psalms—fade under autumn rain. Mayor Eric Adams, touring the site in April, decried it as “a close-knit community’s deepest wound,” pledging $5 million for pedestrian barriers. Yet locals scoff: “Speed traps? Sure. But enforcement? Nah.”
Ocean Parkway’s danger isn’t hyperbole. Dubbed “Deathway” by cyclists, it’s racked 12 fatalities since 2020, per NYPD stats—mostly speeders ignoring lights. Vision Zero, NYC’s anti-crash initiative, installed speed cameras in 2023, but data shows tickets up 40%, deaths barely down. “All the time, I see people flying,” said resident Rosa Mendez, 62, who witnessed the crash. “That road’s a racetrack. Until someone sues the city.”
Experts weigh in on the plea: Dr. Lila Torres, a forensic psychologist at Columbia University, told this outlet it’s “textbook trauma mitigation—but does it eclipse accountability?” Yarimi’s PTSD claim echoes high-profile cases, like the 2019 Uber driver’s manslaughter plea in a similar NYC fatality, netting four years. But critics, including Families for Safe Streets advocate Amy Cohen, blast it as “elite empathy”: “Influencers get therapy; everyday drivers get life.” Gonzalez’s office defends the deal as “pragmatic,” avoiding a trial that could drag Philip’s healing. Sentencing is set for January 15; Yarimi, in Rikers’ protective unit, faces mandatory counseling.
For Ari Saada, it’s scant solace. From his now-silent Midwood rowhouse—echoing with ghosts of bedtime stories—he’s filed a wrongful death suit against Yarimi and Audi, seeking millions for Philip’s care. “She took my world,” he said in an exclusive sit-down. “But I’ll fight so no father buries his dreams alone.” Yarimi’s daughter, meanwhile, visits under supervision, a poignant reminder of innocence lost on both sides.
This Brooklyn bloodbath underscores a grim national toll: 42,939 traffic deaths in 2024, per NHTSA, with pedestrians up 77% since 2010. NYC alone logs 120 pedestrian fatalities yearly, half in Brooklyn. As Yarimi’s wigs gather dust in her locked studio—once a hub for bridal sheitels—the Saadas’ story screams for reform: stricter licensing, mental health checkpoints, roads that protect the vulnerable.
In a city of eight million hurried souls, one wigmaker’s wild ride ended three bright lights. The plea may close her chapter, but for Midwood’s mourners, the wound festers. Will three years heal it? Or just fuel the next outrage?
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