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‘Smart, funny, and engaging’: Times Square victim was Michigan teen

A small tribute to 18-year-old Alyssa Elsman was set up in Times Square the day after a car crashed into pedestrians on 42nd street and 7th avenue, killing Elsman and injuring 20 others.

The 18-year-old woman who died in the Times Square rampage on Thursday was a Michigan high school graduate with a knack for baking muffins, according to officials at her school who knew her.

Alyssa Elsman was the lone person killed in Thursday’s midday attack, in which police say a suspect intentionally drove onto the sidewalk and hit crowds of pedestrians in New York’s Times Square.

Elsman’s 13-year-old sister, Ava, was among 20 other bystanders who were injured. She was being treated for a collapsed lung and broken pelvis, officials said.

Of those injured, three were in critical condition and one, a 38-year-old from Canada, was in very critical condition, officials said.

Friday, a makeshift memorial for Elsman of flowers and photos was created in the area near where she was killed.

Elsman, from Portage, Michigan, had visited Times Square before. In April 2016, she posted a photo on Instagram from the red stairs that overlooked the throngs of pedestrians in the busy New York tourist attraction.

Elsman graduated from Portage Central High School last year, Portage Public School Community Relations Manager Michelle Karpinski told CNN. Ava Elsman is a student at Portage Central Middle School.

The city is just south of Kalamazoo.

“Our deepest sympathies go out to the Elsman family,” said Portage Public Schools Superintendent Mark Bielang. “It is the most devastating kind of sad when a wonderful person in our community is lost so young, and under such heartbreaking circumstances.”

Her high school principal, Eric Alburtus, remembered Alyssa as a terrific young lady and a culinary expert.

“She was an incredible baker, and was very involved with our culinary program,” Alburtus said. “She would make the most wonderful muffins, and the students would sell them before school to help raise money for the program.”

“Alyssa was the type of person who seemed very shy and reserved when you first met her, but once you started talking to her you realized she was smart, funny and engaging,” Alburtus said. “She will be deeply missed by the staff and students here.”

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