SANTO DOMINGO — In a single day of widespread unrest, two separate violent incidents involving motorcycle taxi drivers have left one man dead and a school bus driver injured in the Greater Santo Domingo metropolitan area, unfolding against a backdrop of already simmering friction between local authorities and the region’s motorcycling community over widespread reckless operation and links to criminal activity.
The first and most deadly of the two incidents took the life of 38-year-old Osvaldo Silverio, a seasoned motorcycle taxi driver based out of the La Barquita sector of Sabana Perdida. According to preliminary law enforcement accounts, Silverio was gunned down in cold blood by Ramón Elías Ureña Hernández — a fellow motorcyclist widely known by his alias “Mon Elías” — following a lingering dispute that erupted between the two men days earlier.
Graphic security camera footage of the attack, which has circulated widely across local social media platforms, captures Silverio walking along a public street in Santo Domingo Norte, wearing his riding helmet, when Ureña Hernández intercepted him from his own motorcycle. After less than a minute of heated verbal exchange, Ureña Hernández drew a firearm and fired two shots directly at Silverio before immediately fleeing the scene on his motorcycle. Investigators later confirmed the root of the conflict was a disagreement over a competing passenger at the shared bus stop where both men worked to pick up fares.
In the wake of the killing, the Dominican National Police has opened a full criminal investigation into the incident and launched a manhunt to locate and arrest the fugitive shooter, who remains at large as of press time.
Hours after the fatal shooting, a second violent incident unfolded in the El Café sector of Herrera, Santo Domingo Oeste, where a mob of local motorcycle taxi drivers viciously attacked Henry González, a driver for the National Student Transportation System (TRAE). The attack was triggered by a minor fender bender between González’s school bus and a motorcycle operated by Gregory González, widely known as “Negro Malo,” who was traveling the wrong way down a one-way lane with two young female passengers.
At the time of the collision, González was in the process of transporting a group of students to the local Rafaela Santaella School. After the crash, dozens of area motorcycle taxi drivers swarmed the bus, pulled González from the vehicle, and beat him, leaving him with visible facial lacerations that required emergency medical treatment. Terrified students trapped inside the bus during the assault screamed for help, with witnesses later confirming that multiple bystanders warned the mob that minors were inside the vehicle — a warning the attackers completely ignored.
Speaking to medical personnel after the attack, the TRAE driver stated he had been unable to avoid the collision, saying: “I had my seatbelt fastened and I never even saw them coming until it was too late.”
In a swift law enforcement response to the attack on the school bus driver, National Police officers moved in to detain all motorcycle taxi drivers who participated in the mob assault. Shortly after the incident, Gregory González, the motorcyclist who caused the initial collision that sparked the violence, turned himself in to authorities voluntarily.
In comments made to reporters alongside National Police spokesperson Diego Pesqueira, Gregory González attempted to justify his actions, claiming the conflict was entirely the bus driver’s fault. “There never should have been a conflict. I did swerve over into his lane, yes, because I was with two kids. He’s the older, more experienced driver, and he never stopped to think that I’m younger and he should have waited for me to pass,” González said. He added that the driver’s facial injuries were a result of González acting in self-defense after the driver failed to brake to avoid hitting him.
Officials from the Santo Domingo West Prosecutor’s Office have announced they will move forward quickly with formal charges against all suspects connected to the attack, and will file a request for pretrial preventive detention for all of those involved in the coming hours. In a statement, prosecutors emphasized that this kind of unprovoked mob violence, particularly against a school transportation driver who was carrying minor students, will not be tolerated. “This type of dangerous, irresponsible behavior cannot be overlooked. We will seek the strictest appropriate measures available under law to hold these attackers accountable,” the statement read.
