VIDEO: Vicious biker gang brutally beats, stomps elderly man and son during broad daylight attack in NYC



An unruly group of dirt bikers violently yanked an elderly man and his adult son out of their car in Harlem, New York, on Tuesday, mercilessly beating them before stealing a cellphone, a wallet, and some cash.

What are the details?

According to a report from WABC-TV, the incident took place during broad daylight hours near the intersection of St. Nicholas Terrace and West 127th Street.

Authorities said that the beating occurred after one of the bikers ran a red light and collided with a car, which held a 64-year-old man and his 36-year-old son.

Surveillance video of the attack shows at least four bikers surrounding the father and son's vehicle as two of them yank the driver out of his vehicle and throw him down on the ground. One of the suspects can then be seen kicking the driver while he lay on the ground, and a second suspect later punching him.

The video also showed others surrounding the victims and kicking them while another suspect appeared to ram their bike into one of the victims.

The victims were transported to a nearby hospital for treatment and were said to be in stable condition.

Authorities ask anyone with any information on the attack to call Crime Stoppers at (800) 577-TIPS.

(Content warning: graphic footage):

WANTED for ROBBERY: On 3/15/22 @ 4:25 PM, @NYPD26PCT the unidentified individuals on dirt bikes approached a 64-year-old victim & his 36-year-old son who were seated inside of their vehicle at St Nicholas Terrace & W 127 St. The victims were pulled from the vehicle & assaulted.pic.twitter.com/XFJquLMA9Z
— NYPD Crime Stoppers (@NYPD Crime Stoppers) 1647490504

What else is there to know about this?

The unnamed 36-year-old victim told the New York Post that his elderly father suffered a concussion as a result of the attack.

“I’m OK, I’m just really concerned about him, concerned about my father,” he told the Post. “I want them to find them, and justice. Because it was an accident, all right? What was the point of assaulting an elderly guy? Like 10 people. Anybody’s a man with 10 people.”

He recalled, “The dirt bike came on the opposite side of the downtown, driving opposite traffic. We stopped and we see all these motorcycles coming around the car. My father was driving. He got in a panic. He was scared. He drove a little bit, like to the middle of the block. We were stopped by one motorcycle. That’s when all of them came. That’s when the altercation happened. One guy broke my father’s driver window, the door handle. Opened the door, yanked him out of the car and started beating him. I got assaulted as well.”

The younger man said that he could only think about his father's safety during the attack.

“I’m just concerned about my father,” he recalled. “I went running to his side.”

Bank employees in NYC told to 'dress down' to avoid becoming a target for crime: Report



Bank of America has reportedly advised its New York City staffers to "dress down" in an effort to avoid becoming a target for robberies or violent crimes, the New York Post reports.

The purported advice comes as lawlessness is on the rise in the Democrat-controlled city.

What are the details?

The Post's Lydia Moynihan explained that senior executives at the company have "quietly encouraged" some of the company's junior employees to "dress down" in order to "attract less attention" while traversing the city to Bank of America's tower at 1 Bryant Park.

"These execs have told their staffers that dressing up, or wearing anything with a Bank of America logo, could make them a target," Moynihan wrote. "One bank employee told [the New York Post's] On the Money he is on high alert after he spotted someone with a knife near the office during a recent trek to the Manhattan workplace."

Another top executive at an unnamed company has also begun carrying a Taser on his commute to his midtown office, and a Wall Street source who works downtown told the outlet that safety has been a frequent topic of conversation on the floor over the past several months.

"Some people I work with have been accosted," the source said. "I'd say it's becoming frequent, if not common. There's probably a dozen incidents that I saw, or have been involved in."

Bank of America declined to comment on the story.

Other employees hope that former NYPD officer and mayor-elect Eric Adams will "take a hard line" when he comes into office.

"But it's almost like he can't get here soon enough to restore law and order," another Wall Street executive told the outlet.

Ronn Torossian, CEO of public relations firm 5WPR, told the outlet that there is a need to make the streets safer in order for people to return to full-time, in-office work during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Undoubtedly, part of getting people back to the office in NYC is about making the streets and subways safer,” Torossian said. “I would venture less than 50 percent of people are back to the office full-time — and I don’t know if that ever changes in NYC.”