Hit-and-run in Brooklyn kills 75-year-old grandmother. Here's more on the SUV police are looking for.
Briefly

Hit-and-run in Brooklyn kills 75-year-old grandmother. Here's more on the SUV police are looking for.
"A Brooklyn family is coping with the loss of their matriarch, a 75-year-old beloved grandmother who was struck and killed by an SUV as she was crossing the street just feet away from her home on Saturday night. That driver is still on the run and the victim's relatives want the person responsible off the streets. Police say Judith Byron died after the SUV blew through a red light while she was in the crosswalk at Seventh and 41st Street in Sunset Park."
"Henry Byron spoke to CBS News New York on Sunday from his hospital bed at Mount Sinai -- where he is recovering from a bout with pneumonia -- about the loss of his wife. "They had told me that they had done everything they could," Henry Byron said. "I'm trying to hold myself together. If it wasn't for my daughter, I wouldn't be able to go on anymore." The 81-year-old husband described his wife as a beloved fixture in their neighborhood."
"Their daughter, Tomasina, called her mother her best friend. "You know, it's just us, you know, my dad and my mom. They adopted me when I was a baby. They are my life," Tomasina Byron said. "She was all of our lives. She was a lovely woman." "It's just right here by our house, and that somebody was just so careless and callous and then just drove off is just disgusting," neighbor Jeremy Kaplan said. "I'm not after retribution, you know, but I would like to see justice done.""
Judith Byron, 75, was struck and killed by an SUV while crossing at Seventh and 41st Street in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, after the vehicle blew through a red light. The SUV, described as a silver Toyota, fled northbound on Seventh Avenue and the driver remains at large. Family members report deep grief; husband Henry Byron, 81, is recovering from pneumonia in Mount Sinai and mourns his wife. Their daughter Tomasina described her mother as her best friend and a beloved fixture. Neighbors erected a makeshift memorial and expressed outrage at the apparent hit-and-run. Authorities hope surveillance footage will identify the vehicle.
Read at Cbsnews
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