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St. Albans girl dead in Brooklyn hit-run

By Rich Bockmann

Funeral arrangements have been made for the 9-year-old St. Albans girl who was killed in a car crash in Brooklyn over the weekend.

The viewing for Rebecca Ramnarine will be held Wednesday at the Restoration Temple Assembly of God, 4610 Church Ave. in Brooklyn, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., followed by a service from 6:30 to 7 p.m. The funeral was scheduled for Thursday in Fresh Meadows.

Rebecca had just left a family gathering at the church Sunday when the car she was riding in was hit by an alleged hit-and-run driver.

A St. Albans family was in mourning this week after one of their youngest members was killed by an alleged hit-and-run driver in Brooklyn Sunday.

It took the jaws of life to free the young girl from the twisted metal of the Hyundai Elantra she was riding in, but despite first responders’ best efforts she was pronounced dead at Brookdale Hospital, police said.

Rebecca and her family attend services at the Restoration Temple Assembly of God in Brooklyn every Sunday, and she was riding with a family friend on their way to Canarsie Pier, where the clan was going to meet before heading to Queens for dinner, her family said.

But just about a dozen blocks away from the pier a Honda Odyssey minivan smashed into the Hyundai and a third vehicle at the intersection of Avenue N and Remsen Avenue, police said.

Police said the driver of the Honda, 62-year-old Kenneth Palache, had allegedly fled the scene from a nearby hit-and-run accident just a few minutes earlier, and when officers stopped the Huntington, L.I., resident, he again took off.

It was just a few minutes later that his minivan plowed into the two other cars, police said.

Palache was arrested and charged with two counts of leaving the scene of an accident, driving without a license and criminal negligence causing a death, police said.

Rebecca’s father, Richard Ramnarine, said he was a few blocks away in another car when one of the passengers got a call from a family member about the horrific accident.

At his St. Albans home Monday morning, he praised the work of first responders as they cut away the twisted metal of the crash, a scene he said was too much to take in.

“I couldn’t watch,” he said.

Ramnarine said the family was trying to cope with the loss of the smiling young girl, who seemed mature beyond her years.

“She was very loving and friendly. She loved fashion. She loved to dance and sing,” he said. “She was always with the older girls.”

Ramnarine, 39, said he was too full of grief to be angry at Palache.

“We’re just trying to rest and come to grips with it,” he said. “I’m not angry at him. It’s just that we wish we had her back.”

Reach reporter Rich Bockmann by e-mail at rbockmann@cnglocal.com or by phone at 718-260-4574.