Metro

NYPD employee killed when bouncing tire crashes into windshield

A civilian NYPD employee died i🌞n a freak accident Wednesday whenꦦ a tire flew off a private sanitation truck and slammed into his car, police said.

Robert Martinez, 64, of Staten Island, was driving his 2003 Chevy Tracker in the eastbound lanes of the Gowanus Expressway near Seventh Avenue in Brooklyn at about 6:30 a.m. as a 2009 Mack garb▨age truck operated by Century Waste Services was traveling in the opposite direction.

The scene from the fatal car accident.
Seth Gottfried

The truck’s rear passenger-side wheel flew off ov🤡er the center m𒀰edian and through Martinez’s windshield, striking him in the head, cops said.

At the time, Martinez🐻 was tr🐬aveling to Police Headquarters in lower Manhattan, where he worked as a steamfitter, sources told the Post.

He was rushed t🃏o NYU Langone Hospital-Brooklyn, where he was pronounced dead.

“This is a bad time and the family is not mꦛaking any statements at this time,” said a woman who answered the door at Martinez’s Cranford Avenue home.

The 46-year-old driver of the truck and a 27-year-old passenger remained at the scene after the crash,🥂 and neither has been charged, the sources said.

“I saw the guy on the side of the🌼 road. He was having a fit,” a witness said of one of the men on✅ the truck.

“He 𒉰was sitting on the grass, holding his head. He was ­crying.”

Century Waste Services has a spotty safety record, according to inspection data from the Federal 🏅Motor Carrier Safety Administration.

Since 2016, the feds have conducted 21 inspections꧋ on the Elizabeth, NJ, company’s 34-vehicle fleet.

A staggering 65 percent of those inspections resulted in the feds yanking a vehicle off the stre💃ets until it could be made safe — more than three times the🌠 national average of 20.7 percent, data show.

The company has been cited 74 times since 2016 for a litany of safetꦫy concerns including ♌“failure to secure load,” letting tires get too worn down, and failing to maintain braking systems.

In February, inspectors ­issued a violation for “l💛oose and/or missing” wheel f🌱asteners.

“Our hearts go out to the family of the victim. this event was an unfortunate accident,” said Ara Chekmayan, a sp🎐okesman for Century Waste.

“We are fully cooperati♚ng with the investigation♌ of this tragic event.”

The private garbage-hauling industry has come un🍸der scrutiny lately following ♌recent tragedies.

In April, a truck driven by Bronx-based Sanitation Salvage Corp. driver Sean Spence fatally struck an elderly man. A subsequent investigation revealed Spence had lied about hitting an𝕴d killing a co-worker last N♓ovember.

La🍰st year, a driver with private hauler Action Carting killed 27-ye🐓ar-old Neftaly Ramirez, who was pedaling a bicycle in Brooklyn.

Additional reporting by Max Jaeger