‘Watch what I’m going to do:’ motorist allegedly boasted before plowing into crowd in Logan Square

Timothy Nielsen allegedly told a neighbor how he was “annoyed by yuppies on the boulevard, who are out with their dogs.” Then Nielsen told the man to “watch” what he’d do and sped down the alley, prosecutors said.

A woman was paralyzed in a carjacking Jan. 16 in Aurora.

Sun-Times file photo

A convicted felon annoyed by “yuppies” and their dogs in Logan Square plowed into a crowd of picnickers with his pickup truck, striking two people, Cook County prosecutors said Monday.

“Watch what I’m going to do,” Timothy Nielsen allegedly told a resident Saturday evening before driving his red Ford F-150 onto a grass median and into the group of 10 to 15 people and their dogs in 2900 block of West Logan Boulevard.

Nielsen, who also lives Logan Square, became “increasingly hostile” at the partygoers, complaining about their dogs’ behavior in public, prosecutors said.

The picnickers, who were celebrating a birthday, asked Nielsen, 57, to leave.

But instead of driving away, Nielsen reversed his truck and turned the steering wheel toward the group, prosecutors said.

He didn’t clear the curb at first but on his second attempt, Nielsen allegedly made it onto the grassy parkway and ran over the group’s bicycles and chairs before striking the victims, prosecutors said.

One person suffered minor injuries after he or she was hit trying to get out of Nielsen’s way, prosecutors said. Another victim — a 42-year-old woman — got pinned underneath Nielsen’s truck, prosecutors said. The woman has since been treated and released from Illinois Masonic Medical Center.

After striking the victims, Nielsen attempted to drive away but a Yeti cooler wedged underneath his truck kept it from moving. Witnesses tried telling him that someone was under his vehicle and when some others tried to pull him out of his truck, he allegedly brandished a knife. He ended up swinging the weapon at someone, causing minor cuts to that victim’s arm, prosecutors said.

Nielsen was eventually disarmed by a grandmother who had been driving in the area with her granddaughter, prosecutors said.

The woman, who made a U-turn before stopping to help after she saw Nielsen run into the crowd, was also able to take the keys out of the truck’s ignition, prosecutors said.

The scene was “chaotic,” responding Chicago police officers said.

Had it not been for the Yeti cooler, the intentional attack would have been “even more disastrous,” prosecutors said.

“His intent was to plow through that crowd, and that is what he did,” an assistant state’s attorney told Judge John F. Lyke Jr. Monday.

The Chicago Tribune and Block Club previously reported that a witness said Nielsen made anti-Asian comments before the attack. Prosecutors, however, did not mention such comments in court.

The neighbor who Nielsen approached before running into the crowd had been watering his flowers when Nielsen asked him how long he lived in Logan Square, prosecutors said.

When the man said almost 20 years, Nielsen allegedly told him how he was “annoyed by yuppies on the boulevard, who are out with their dogs.”

Then Nielsen told the man to “watch” what he’d do and sped down the alley, prosecutors said.

The man told investigators he heard screaming 30 seconds later.

Nielsen has several prior felony convictions, including a 1989 kidnapping. In that incident, Nielsen and an accomplice posed as police officers and kidnapped a man, whom they beat and held in a garage for ransom, prosecutors said.

In 1999, Nielsen and his brother admitted in federal court to loaning thousands of dollars to two men and collecting huge interest payments enforced with beatings, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

Nielsen admitted that he smashed glass “in the eye area” of the escort-service operator on May 29, 1994, sending the man to the hospital for head trauma and a gash that required five stitches.

He also committed extortion in 2001 and retail theft in 2012, prosecutors said.

Lyke ordered Nielsen held without bail for attempted murder “especially since the weapon of choice appears to be a vehicle which is easily accessible.”

“People were enjoying this sunny beautiful day, which it was, and that this defendant appeared to rain on their parade literally and figuratively,” the judge said.

Nielsen is expected back in court May 10.

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