WATCH: NYPD vehicle flying to an emergency call in Brooklyn struck & injured a pedestrian while riding a bike on Stagge St. (unknown Credit) pic.twitter.com/xdCo4n3LKN — NYC Scanner (@NYScanner) May 16, 2017

Unsourced video circulating online appears to affirm the NYPD's account of a crash early Monday morning in East Williamsburg that left a cyclist hospitalized.

On Monday, police officials said that officers in a department SUV were on Morgan Avenue, responding to an assault call at around 1:40 a.m., when the officer driving hit the cyclist at Stagg Street. The NYPD's account left room for confusion about where exactly the cyclist was—spokespeople told reporters that the officers had their lights and sirens on and were traveling towards Flushing Avenue, but a spokesman who said that the cyclist was riding his bike "against traffic" did not have more information on where on the road the cyclist was.

The video seems to clarify this. It shows the cyclist rolling off of Stagg Street, a one-way leading away from Morgan, into the southbound lane on Morgan, and getting struck by the police SUV. Emergency medical personnel transported the unidentified cyclist to Elmhurst Hospital in stable condition.

The crash had echoes of the 2013 collision that claimed the life of Ryo Oyamada, a 24-year-old student from Japan, near the Queensbridge Houses. In that crash, officers said they were responding to an early-morning assault call and were driving down 40th Avenue when they smashed into Oyamada as he crossed the street, killing him. Officer Darren Ilardi, the driver, claimed that he had his flashing lights on, but video and witness accounts showed that was a lie. An administrative law judge declined to take any action against Ilardi, calling the crash "unavoidable."

Ilardi is still on the force.

Video of the Williamsburg crash lacks sound, but it appears to show the SUV's flashing lights activated.

We could not reach the owner of 200 Morgan Avenue, the building where the security camera that recorded the clip seems to be located.

Morgan Avenue is not officially a bike route, but the broad thoroughfare lined with industrial buildings is one of the most direct paths between Bushwick and Greenpoint, and passes near numerous restaurants, cafes, art galleries, and loft apartment complexes. The two-mile-long road was the scene of 54 crashes in 2016, according to NYPD data, including three that injured five cyclists altogether. Two of the crashes that injured cyclists were at Morgan and Stagg.

[Via Reddit]