Updated May 26, 2026 — 2:34 PM. Salvatore Sparacino IV, 29, of Smithtown was killed Monday night when his vehicle split in half during a high-speed crash on the westbound Northern State Parkway near Exit 46 (New Highway overpass) in Smithtown. New York State Police say erratic driving and unsafe speed caused the crash. The driver was ejected and pronounced dead at the scene.
What Happened
New York State Police responded at approximately 8:30 PM on Monday, May 25 to a single-vehicle crash on the westbound Northern State Parkway near the New Highway overpass at Exit 46 in Smithtown.
At the scene, troopers found a 2010 Volkswagen Eos that had been split in half from the force of the impact. The driver — the sole occupant — was ejected and did not survive.
Police have identified the victim as Salvatore Sparacino IV, 29, of Smithtown.
Investigators determined that erratic driving and unsafe speed caused the vehicle to lose control and crash. According to Newsday, the force of the collision was sufficient to split the vehicle into two separate pieces and throw the driver from the car — indicating impact speeds far exceeding the parkway’s 55 mph limit.
The investigation is ongoing.
The Physics of a Vehicle Splitting in Half
A vehicle splitting apart on impact indicates catastrophic structural failure at extremely high speed. Modern vehicles are engineered with crumple zones and reinforced passenger compartments designed to absorb crash energy. For a vehicle to physically separate into two pieces, the forces involved typically exceed what those systems can handle — generally speeds well above 80-100 mph on impact with a fixed object.
The 2010 Volkswagen Eos is a compact convertible with a retractable hardtop. Convertibles have an inherently different structural profile than fixed-roof vehicles — the absence of a continuous roof structure means the vehicle relies more heavily on the floor pan, door sills, and A-pillar reinforcement for rigidity. In an extreme-speed impact, this can result in more catastrophic structural separation than in a fixed-roof vehicle of similar size.
Ejection in a single-vehicle crash at this speed is almost universally fatal. NHTSA data shows that occupants who are ejected in a crash are 4 times more likely to die than those who remain in the vehicle. Seatbelt use is the single most important factor in preventing ejection.
Northern State Parkway — Speed and Safety Context
The Northern State Parkway is a limited-access parkway originally designed in the 1930s by Robert Moses with narrow lanes, tight curves, and short merge ramps that were never engineered for modern vehicle speeds. The posted speed limit is 55 mph, but the parkway’s design characteristics include:
- No shoulders in many sections — no room for error
- Stone overpasses with low clearance — originally designed for 1930s vehicles
- Tight curves that become dangerous above 60 mph, particularly the S-curves near Exit 46
- Trees and barriers close to the travel lanes — reducing reaction time for any loss of control
The Exit 46 area near New Highway in Smithtown is on a stretch of the parkway with moderate curves and several overpass structures — fixed concrete objects that provide no give on impact.
Memorial Day Weekend Speed
Memorial Day weekend consistently produces some of the year’s worst speed-related crashes on Long Island. Lighter holiday traffic on normally congested parkways creates the illusion of open road, encouraging excessive speed. This crash occurred at 8:30 PM — post-holiday-cookout hours when impaired and aggressive driving peaks.
What the Law Says
Speed-related fatal crashes in New York can result in criminal charges for surviving drivers. In single-vehicle fatalities, the investigation focuses on:
- Whether alcohol or drugs were factors (toxicology results typically take 4-6 weeks)
- Whether the vehicle had mechanical defects that contributed to loss of control
- Speed reconstruction using debris field analysis, tire marks, and vehicle deformation
Even in cases where the driver is the sole fatality, the investigation creates a public record that informs road safety policy and engineering decisions for that stretch of road.
The victim’s identity has not been released. Anyone who witnessed the crash or observed erratic driving on the Northern State Parkway prior to the crash is asked to contact NYS Police Troop L at (631) 756-3300.
Sources: News12 Long Island | Newsday | New York State Police | Photo: Neil Miller / Newsday