Note: This post has been updated with additional details about the victim.

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Police have released the name of the man who was killed following a fight outside of the West Brighton bar affiliated with "Mob Wives" reality TV star Angela "Big Ang" Raiola Sunday morning.

NYPD officials have identified the victim as Abdou Cisse, 46, of the 2,500 block of Richmond Terrace in Elm Park.

Police responded to the Drunken Monkey Bar & Grill at 1205 Forest Ave. at 3:40 a.m., and found Cisse laying unconscious on the ground with severe head trauma. He was pronounced dead at the scene, an NYPD spokesman said.

The bar's owner, Sallyann Lombardi, described him as a regular customer who died trying to help the bar's bouncer kick out a trio of unruly customers.

An NYPD spokesman said a witness spotted Cisse trying to calm down another man outside the bar, and the other man punched him in the face, knocking him to the ground.

The man who threw the punch then fled on foot to a nearby Walgreens parking lot, and left in one of two vehicles – both of which turned right onto Forest Avenue and drove off in an unknown direction, the NYPD spokesman said. The NYPD did not identify the make and model of either vehicle.

As of Sunday night, police have yet to announce any arrests made in the case.

Cisse, a native of the West African nation of Senegal, worked as a machinist at a boatyard on Richmond Terrace, his neighbors told the Advance last night. They described him as a magnanimous, friendly man who liked to talk about a swath of topics ranging from international politics to history to boxing and soccer.

Cisse, a father of two, moved into a second-floor apartment in a row of attached homes in the shadow of the Bayonne Bridge about two years ago, said one neighbor, who declined to give his name.

"We talk about all kinds of things, stories, childhood," the neighbor said. They'd often sit outside, drinking beers and chatting, he said.

Another neighbor, Mark Wilson, said Cisse's brother visited the apartment Sunday evening in an attempt to collect his personal effects.

"He was a very nice, polite guy. He always said hi, very cheerful," Wilson said. "He went to that bar every week.... He had a couple of friends that were there."