Incident location, Long Island
What Happened
Jaden D’Souza, a 20-year-old Queens man, was sentenced to up to 18 years in state prison Friday for a deadly high-speed, drug-impaired crash that killed his sister and her best friend on the Southern State Parkway in January 2025, according to NBC New York.
On January 12, 2025 around 11 p.m., D’Souza was driving a 2016 Dodge Dart eastbound on the Southern State Parkway near Exit 30, carrying his sister 21-year-old Haily D’Souza and 23-year-old Crystal Alba-Figueroa in the backseat, and another 23-year-old male passenger in the front seat, prosecutors said. D’Souza admitted he was high and driving over 100 mph when he lost control of the vehicle.
Video taken by his sister on her cellphone shows how fast he was driving, and dash cam video from another person’s car shows how quickly he speeds past that car, NBC New York reports. Seconds later, that car was struck by a tire that went flying off of D’Souza’s car after it crashed.
Prosecutors say D’Souza was traveling in and out of lanes at a high rate of speed when he lost control of the vehicle, drove off the road, and crashed into a tree on the grassy shoulder. Haily D’Souza and Crystal Alba-Figueroa died on impact. The fourth person, who sat in the front of the car, survived but suffered traumatic brain injury and life-long injuries.
“It was a series of deliberate and dangerous choices by the defendant,” said Katie Zizza, deputy bureau chief of vehicular crimes for the Nassau County District Attorney’s office. “To get high to drive it outrageous speeds and to turn the parkway into a race track.”
D’Souza spent more than an hour at Nassau County Supreme Court in Mineola hugging and saying goodbye to his family members and friends who attended court to show their support before he was sentenced. His mother, Daniela D’Souza, did not speak to reporters.
Location & Road Context
The crash occurred on the Southern State Parkway near Exit 30, which is in the Hempstead area of Nassau County. The Southern State Parkway is a major east-west highway that runs through Nassau and Suffolk counties, connecting to the Belt Parkway and serving as a key commuter route across Long Island.
Investigation & Legal Proceedings
Judge Caryn Fink noted that this was one of the most difficult cases she’s had, calling the case “heartbreaking all around. Two innocent lives lost, one permanently injured and a fourth young life going to prison.” D’Souza was sentenced on vehicular manslaughter and other charges, with defense attorney Donald Rollock saying he will be up for parole after serving six years.
“What happened can’t be taken back,” said attorney Donald Rollock. “There has to be accountability but at the same time there has to be forgiveness. The family is torn. They had to bury one and now one is going to jail.” Rollock also said in court that “these families will be forever tormented from the actions of my client, but to me he’s a kid who messed up badly. He has no prior criminal history.”
Yajaira Figueroa, Crystal’s mother, prepared a victim impact statement that was read by Zizza: “Crystal was not only my daughter, she was my entire life, I trust that this court will consider the value of her life in the pain her absence has caused.”
Broader Impact
Nassau District Attorney Anne Donnelly hopes this case will serve as a warning to those who insist on racing cars and driving recklessly. “Don’t do this! This is what leads to people dying,” said Donnelly after the sentencing. Defense attorney Rollock also called for enhanced highway safety measures, saying “what they need to do is install cameras on these highways and install speed readers. And seize vehicles from repeat offenders.”