Man charged with DWI after father, 2 young kids die in Long Island crash

Kristin Thorne Image
Monday, July 13, 2015
Arraignment for DWI suspect in Long Island crash that killed a father and 2 kids
Kristin Thorne is in Central Islip with more.

BAY SHORE (WABC) -- A 24-year-old man appeared in court Monday in connection with a fiery crash that killed a father and his two young children on Long Island.

O'Neil Sharp, Jr., went before a judge to face DWI charges and leaving the scene of an accident.

Prosecutors say Sharpe was speeding at the time of the accident, and they believe he was drunk after partying with friends.

"Our preliminary investigation shows that he was at a barbecue with friends, that there was drinking involved," prosecutor John Scott Prudenti said.

The Ostane family had also just left a barbecue, and the Queens family was heading home on the Southern State Parkway when police say Sharpe rear ended them around exit 41, forcing their car over a median and several lanes of traffic.

The car burst into flames, trapping Ancio Ostane, his 8-year-old son Andy and his 4-year-old daughter Sephora in the vehicle.

Their mother Lucnie was able to escape.

Prosecutors say Sharpe's car came to rest right near the Ostane's vehicle, but instead of helping, they say he fled the scene and left his car.

Sharpe denies all the charges.

"We entered a denial to all charges and allegations," attorney Harry Tilis said. "He's looking forward to seeing this case through.

State police arrested Sharpe four hours later at his mother's house in Rockville Centre.

"His vehicle was recovered at the scene, with a license plate and tag which assisted the state police in making that determination and subsequent arrest of this individual," Prudenti said.

Just before Sharpe's court appearance in Central Islip, state police took one of his friends in for questioning.

"Our investigation into several aspects of this case are ongoing and continuing," Prudenti said.

Lucnie Bouaz-Ostane also spoke to Eyewitness News, saying she cannot believe her two little angels and her kind-hearted husband are gone.

The father was a math professor, and Andy had just received his First Communion. Sephora would always pray for her mother's patients.

"He was the student of the month, and was going to third grade, didn't make it," she said. "My daughter was happy to go to kindergarten to be a big girl - she didn't make it."

She says one of the last things her family did together was pray.