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Funeral services have been set for Friday and Saturday for Jordan Nasir St. Fort Colin, a 23-year-old Patchogue man who competed in the independent wrestling circuit as “Black Flash” Jordan Saint and was killed in a head-on crash on the Bethpage State Parkway last week.
Family will receive friends at Claude R. Boyd-Spencer Funeral Home, located at 448 W. Main St. in Babylon, from 5-9 p.m. on Friday. A funeral Mass is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Saturday at Ss. Cyril & Methodius Roan Catholic Church on Deer Park Avenue in Deer Park.
Saint was driving a 2012 Nissan Altima on the Bethpage State Parkway about 9:30 a.m. on Friday when a 2019 Hyundai Sonata crossed over the double yellow line and struck his vehicle head-on, New York State Police said. The crash and investigation closed the parkway in both directions for several hours.
The driver of the Hyundai was seriously injured, and police said there were no passengers in either vehicle.
At the time, Saint was excited about an upcoming event in Texas that he was scheduled to wrestle in. Just one hour before the wreck, Saint on Fscebook posted a flyer for the Austin event “Burst & Decay” scheduled for Aug. 2.
Saint had been involved in professional wrestling since 2022 and had been part of Naptown All-Pro Wrestling since 2023. He also competed for the Texas-based Pandemonium: Pro Wrestling, where he had recently turned in a standout performance in Las Vegas that the promotion said had put him on track for a bigger role with the company going forward.
Pandemonium celebrated Saint’s career as a rising wrestling star and mourned his death in an X post.
This morning we were informed that our dear friend Jordan Saint unexpectedly passed away from a car accident.
— Pandemonium: Pro Wrestling (@ProPandemonium) June 14, 2026
Jordan was a very talented wrestler but those that knew him, know that he was truly an unbelievable human. He was the finest example of what truly loving pro wrestling… pic.twitter.com/8b3PqywwSt
Pandemonium wrote that Saint “was the finest example of what truly loving pro wrestling looked like,” adding that “nobody I’ve ever come across has loved pro wrestling more than Jordan Saint” and that he “touched so many people with his kindness, his passion, his personality and his charm.”
The promotion later announced that, with his family’s permission, it was renaming its Aug. 2 event “JoJo” and will live-stream the show with proceeds going to his family.
Naptown All-Pro Wrestling, based in Indianapolis, also paid tribute, saying that passion for the art and sport of pro wrestling bled through in every action fro Saint.
The promotion called him hardheaded and dedicated to his craft, saying Saint was quick to soak up knowledge and that, combined with his superb athleticism, he took to all aspects of in-ring competition lightning fast.
Saint, according to his obituary, was known to family as “Jojo” and was a devoted son, brother and friend who, outside the ring, loved skateboarding and “embraced life with freedom, creativity, and adventure.”
Saint is survived by his father, Jean Steve; his mother, Viviane; sisters Tiyanna and Alyssa; brother AJ; grandparents Robert, Monette, Max and Lemene; and extended family, friends and fellow wrestlers.
Top: Jordan Nasir St. Fort Colin (Claude R. Boyd-Spencer Funeral Home) and (Pandemonium: Pro Wrestling / X)





















